Type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | 2009 |
Headquarters | Melbourne, Australia |
Key people | Steve Gallagher, CEO |
Products | Mobility solutions, including smart card Automated Fare Collection Systems and intelligent transportation systems |
Website | http://www.vixtechnology.com |
Vix Technology (Vix) is an Australia-based technology company that designs, supplies and operates mobility solutions for the public transit industry, including automated fare collection (AFC) systems, intelligent transportation systems (ITS) and passenger information display systems (PIDS).
Vix has four main areas of business:
The company has designed, supplied and operated mobility solutions around the world, including Hong Kong's Octopus card system,[5] San Francisco's TransLink system (now called Clipper),[6] and Stockholm's Resekortet system.[7]
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In 1978, Associated Electronic Services Ltd (AES), a Perth-based engineering company, began developing an automated fare collection (AFC) system. In 1984 AES won a contract for an AFC system in Toronto, Canada. That same year Energy Research Group (ERG) was listed on the stock exchange. ERG was a venture capital-backed company, researching various technologies including an electronic sign board and a manufacturing process for surfboards.
In 1987, ERG acquired a controlling interest in AES. The first project the new ERG won was in Darwin, resulting in the world's first use of smart cards for passengers by a public transit organisation. In 1988 ERG acquired the balance of AES.
In 1989, ERG acquired Radiolab, which specialised in pagers and base stations, to become ERG's telecommunications and manufacturing division. ERG also acquired a 70% interest in Prodata Electronics, Belgium.[8]
In 1997 ERG formed an alliance with Motorola,[9] primarily for their smartcard technology, and won substantial contracts in Berlin, Rome, San Francisco and Singapore. An alliance with American Express was formed. Ecard was established.[10]
2008 saw the New South Wales government cancel the Tcard project, with law suits in both directions (currently outstanding).
In 2009, Vix acquired the assets of the former ERG Group, when ERG restructured and changed its name to Videlli Limited.[11]
In 2010, Vix acquired ACIS, a leading UK-based supplier of ITS and PIDS solutions.[12]
In 2011, Vix launched a rebranding of the company, integrating all of its business under one brand "Vix".[13]
ERG developed the components of the Octopus card system for Hong Kong. The system was completed in September 1997 and remains the largest transit smart card project in the world with over 14 million transactions per day.[14]
In April 1999 the ERG-Motorola alliance was contracted to the largest smart card project in United States to design, build, operate and maintain the Clipper (then called TransLink) fare payment system in the San Francisco Bay Area. The contract encompasses the six largest transit operators, including buses, light, medium and heavy rail carriers, and ferries. Muni and Caltrain began accepting TransLink on all routes starting in September 2008.[15] Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) began accepting it in early 2009, followed by SamTrans and Santa Clara VTA. However, when Motorola withdrew from the contract, the MTC refused to assign it solely to ERG because it was concerned that ERG had insufficient operating capital.[16] On 27 May 2009, the contract was assigned from Motorola and ERG to Cubic Transportation Systems.[17] TransLink was renamed Clipper and officially launched on 16 June 2010 with Cubic as the operational partner.[18]
In April 2003, ERG signed a contract with Stockholm’s public transport authority, Storstockholms Lokaltrafik (SL) to implement a smart card based fare collection system. The contract involved the upgrade of the current rail and metro magnetic ticketing system to contactless smart cards, together with the extension of the system to the bus network, sales outlets, and new ticket vending machines. The contract included the issuing of over one million cards. The system went into public trial from September 2008 and became widely available to the public in 2009.
In 1999, the ERG-Motorola alliance won a contract in Singapore to design and install an integrated smart card ticketing system known as EZ-Link for the Land Transport Authority. On 13 April 2002, the smart card ticketing system went into full service on Singapore's public transport network. At the end of the first week in operation it was processing more than 500,000 transactions per day, a figure that has now risen to more than seven million. EZ-Link is now one of the largest integrated smart card based transit systems in the world with more than 22,000 readers in place across the five transit operators covering bus, rail and light rail.
Vix has also designed, developed, and/or operated solutions in the following locations:
The ERG (now Videlli Ltd) contract to develop the Tcard system for the New South Wales Public Transport Ticketing Corporation (PTTC) was terminated 23 January 2008. The NSW Government announced their intention to recover the project costs from ERG.[19] Videlli lodged a countersuit in May 2008 to recover over $200 million in costs.