The present invention relates to vehicle parking enforcement systems and, more particularly, vehicle parking enforcement systems other than pay parking systems.
Currently, municipalities have a great number of locations on municipal streets where parking is either prohibited or restricted permanently and/or to particular times. For example, parking of vehicles will be prohibited in bus stop zones, red or yellow zones and in the vicinity of fire hydrants. On some busy streets, parking will be prohibited during rush hours but not otherwise. Similarly in private parking lots, parking spots may be reserved for specific individuals only or for customers of specific businesses. In addition, parking time limits may be enforced for these customers to prevent abuse and create turnover. To date there has been no automated way to enforce violations of these parking regulations. In order to enforce municipal parking violations, parking by-law enforcement officers patrol the streets on foot or in vehicles and issue parking tickets and summon tow truck operators. Similarly for private parking lots, operators physically monitor use of their parking spaces and may also issue private parking tickets and summon tow truck operators to tow vehicles or alternatively immobilize the vehicles. Typically, comparatively few enforcement officers are charged with responsibility for a large area and number of parking violators, so enforcement is random and uneven.
In-ground vehicle sensors are widely used to control stoplights and thereby assist in more efficient vehicular traffic. An example of such as in-ground sensor is the GROUND-HOG™ manufactured by Nu-metrics which is a wireless, self-contained, in-ground traffic monitor which transmits a wireless signal upon detection of a vehicle. The use of in-ground sensors in connection with an improved parking meter system is disclosed in the present inventor's International application no. PCT/CA206/001372 filed Aug. 21, 2006 which is pending and which is incorporated herein by reference. However the benefits of in-ground sensors have not to date been fully taken advantage of for vehicle parking enforcement where pay parking is not offered. In addition, the benefits of in-ground sensors have not to date been fully taken advantage of for the assistance of traffic management.
According to the present invention there is provided a vehicle parking enforcement system wherein in-ground vehicle sensors are coupled with a microcontroller or microprocessor to detect the presence or absence of a vehicle in a parking space, determine whether the vehicle is in violation of the parking regulations and communicate a violation to a central location. The in-ground vehicle sensors may also include a digital camera.
The invention therefore provides a method of vehicle parking control and enforcement in respect of a plurality of unmetered parking spaces, the method comprising: a) providing a plurality of in-ground sensors in spaced in-ground locations in the umetered parking spaces, each in-ground sensor associated with a related parking space and comprising a vehicle sensing element, a microprocessor, a clock and a timer coupled with and controlled by the microprocessor, a memory communicating with the microprocessor and containing parking information respecting the related parking space, and wireless communication means coupled to the microprocessor; b) upon one of the vehicle sensors sensing the presence of a vehicle in a parking space, communicating the presence of a vehicle in the related parking space to said microprocessor; c) the microprocessor starting the timing of a parking period for the related parking space based on said parking rules; d) if the parking information provides that the related parking space is a no-parking space at the time the vehicle was sensed, wirelessly communicating a violation signal to a parking authority if the vehicle is still sensed in the related parking space after a pre-determined standby interval from when the vehicle was sensed; e) if the parking information provide that the related parking space is a time-limited parking space for a specified duration at the time said vehicle was sensed, continuing to time the elapsed parking time until the microprocessor receives a signal from the vehicle sensor that the vehicle has left the related parking space, or until the specified duration has expired; and f) if the vehicle is still in the related parking space after the specified duration has expired, wirelessly communicating a violation signal to a parking authority.
The invention therefore further provides a method of vehicle parking control and enforcement in respect of a plurality of unmetered parking spaces, the method comprising: a) providing a plurality of in-ground sensors in spaced in-ground locations in the umetered parking spaces, each in-ground sensor associated with a related parking space and comprising a vehicle sensing element, a microprocessor, a clock and a timer coupled with and controlled by the microprocessor, a memory communicating with the microprocessor and containing parking information respecting the related parking space, namely the electronic identification of the vehicle authorized to park in the related space and wireless communication means coupled to the microprocessor; b) providing each vehicle authorized to park in one of the related parking spaces with an electronic tag readable by the in-ground sensor and containing the electronic identification; c) one of the vehicle sensors sensing the presence of a vehicle in a parking space, the in-ground sensor detecting the electronic identification of the vehicle and comparing the electronic identification of the vehicle to the parking information stored in the memory; and d) if the electronic identification of the vehicle differs from the parking information stored in the memory, or said vehicle has no electronic identification, wirelessly communicating a violation signal to a parking authority.
The invention therefore further provides a system for vehicle parking control and enforcement in respect of a plurality of unmetered parking spaces which carries ut the foregoing methods.
These and other features of the invention will become more apparent from the following description in which reference is made to the appended drawings, wherein:
Referring to
In-ground vehicle sensors 118 may have a number of functionalities enclosed in housing 120. The vehicle sensing element of such sensors may be of the type manufactured by Honeywell, Nu-metrics, magnetic or proximity sensors. They may incorporate a microcontroller or microprocessor (referred to herein as the “microprocessor”), a clock to provide the date and time and a timer coupled with and controlled by the microprocessor, a memory communicating with the microprocessor, as well as the vehicle sensing circuit and wireless communication means all coupled to the microprocessor. A solar panel may be provided to provide power and/or charge a battery and a GPS unit may be provided to provide the geographic location of the device. The memory on the device will also store the parking regulations for that location and store any violations. The parking regulations (i.e. whether no stopping and/or no parking is permitted, limited time parking, parking only during certain hours etc.) can be stored in permanent memory for a particular in-ground unit or can be rewritten by the microprocessor, such as on receipt of a wireless instruction from the central parking authority. In-ground sensor 118 may be simply a vehicle detector without camera, as in
Referring to
Alternatively the in-ground sensors 118 can communicate to a hand-held unit 20 of the type disclosed in the present inventor's patent application no. PCT/CA2005/000985, publication no. WO2006/000089, published Jan. 5, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference. The enforcement officer with handheld unit 20 determines the location of the violation and uses the hand-held unit to take a digital image of the vehicle licence plate, or retrieves the original picture taken from camera 16, 51 or 122 either from a central server or from the sensor 118 or camera 51. If the vehicle is provided with an RFID identification tag, an RFID reader in the handheld unit or in-ground sensor 118 or camera 51 can interrogate the tag, which emits a coded reply signal which communicates a vehicle identification code to the interrogating source which decodes it and either the identification number is stored with the violation information for later processing and/or a call is initiated through a communications modem notifying parking authorities at a monitoring station as to a parking violation and providing the vehicle identification number. In either case a parking ticket is prepared, preferably with the digital image of the vehicle license and either placed on the vehicle, mailed to the registered owner of the vehicle, and a towtruck can be summoned if the vehicle needs to be moved or cleared.
Referring to
Alternatively an in-ground sensor 54 with a digital camera, or a separate in-ground or wall-mounted camera 51 can be signalled to take a photo of the offending licence plate, or a mobile camera on the lot can be moved to focus on the violating stall. Since more than one valid electronic tag 62 may be within range of the sensor 54, to avoid multiple tags providing an authorized signal to the sensor, preferably after a tag has been verified to a stall it is “turned off” until it leaves the range of the inquiring signal from sensor 54. Where a number of monthly parkers are authorized to use a number of designated stalls 52, the sensor 54 for each such stall 52 may have a list of a number of authorized IDs that are authorized to park in that stall 52 and when a tag has been verified to a given stall it is “turned off” until it leaves the range of the inquiring signal from sensor 54 so that it does not permit unauthorized parking in adjacent stalls.
Referring to
While a number of exemplary aspects and embodiments have been discussed above, those of skill in the art will recognize certain modifications, permutations, additions and sub-combinations thereof. While wireless communication between the vehicle sensors, digital cameras and central processor is preferred, the system could also be wired for communication.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2008/000338 | 2/20/2008 | WO | 00 | 10/1/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/104053 | 9/4/2008 | WO | A |
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