Telensa’s smart streetlight software will feed into Solidaridad’s traffic light operations centre from where data analytics are used to optimise services.
Milton Keynes City Council is working with Telensa to upgrade 58,000 streetlights across the city with projected energy savings of more than 60 per cent.
Hybrid network gives Telensa the ability to create tailored smart streetlight solutions for customers where wireless technologies sit side-by-side within the system, working interchangeably.
Associated British Ports has chosen Telensa technology for the Port of Southampton, Port of Ipswich and Hams Hall Rail Freight Terminal to provide robust and adaptable intelligent lighting.
A citywide LED streetlight retrofit and upgrade programme aims to improve road safety, reduce energy consumption and emissions and is expected to achieve $1m in annual cost-savings.
Essex claims to have one of the largest streetlight central management systems in the world and reckons it knows from experience it will save around 60 per cent on energy usage.
University of Leicester has implemented a smart lighting control system as part of measures to reduce energy consumption while City of Stirling has opted for a network-as-a-service solution.
The company now provides intelligent lighting control to 23 towns and cities across Poland and the Czech Republic with a total population of 250,000 citizens.
Devon County Council will roll out the system in Exeter and Torbay to wirelessly control 11,000 streetlights and plans further expansion of the network to other smart city applications.
Medway Council in Kent will enable the region to adapt its street lighting network remotely, providing a critical service even during potential lockdowns.
The largest 314 cities in the US are converting to LED, according to the Northeast Group, which projects that the country will invest $8.2bn in street light modernisation over the next decade.
Smart cities will be a major driver of the expansion with APAC expected to register the highest incremental growth due to increasing technology awareness by governments.
End-to-end intelligent street lighting system will give Dunedin City Council control over lighting levels with the lights remotely tailored to suit each location.
Sandwell Council in the West Midlands plans to install more than 11,000 wirelessly connected lights by 2022 and convert all of its streetlights to LED as part of the upgrade.
The Pennsylvania capital is piloting traffic analytics, air quality monitoring and smart waste sensor systems using Telensa’s connected streetlighting system.
The capital of Australia’s Northern Territory is deploying 10,000 replacement LED lights which will be wirelessly connected and controlled by Telensa’s management system.
The UK city will be the first to use Telensa’s Microsoft Azure-powered platform, which will allow it to collect data via multi sensor pods on streetlights
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