When the City of Aarhus, Denmark, needed to improve accessible parking management, they faced a common challenge: how quickly could a modern AI solution be deployed without disrupting city operations? The answer: one day.
The City of Aarhus partnered with GoodVision through the EIT Urban Mobility - RAPTOR 2025 programme to monitor designated accessible parking spaces. The goal was straightforward but critical: provide real-time status of each parking space, gather analytics for better allocation, and identify misuse.
For many municipalities, this type of project sounds complex. Multiple stakeholders, hardware installation, system integration, and weeks of testing. But it doesn't have to be that way.
Working alongside the City of Aarhus and EIT Urban Mobility, GoodVision deployed AI-powered parking monitoring at two key locations:
The entire hardware installation and system setup took just one day.
Here's how we made it happen:
Before any physical work began, GoodVision engineers worked with the City of Aarhus to identify optimal camera locations. Using satellite imagery and street-level data, we assessed viewpoints, potential occlusions, and lighting conditions—all without requiring multiple site visits.
New cameras were temporarily installed at strategic points to cover the selected parking spaces. We're grateful to ATKI Denmark for their invaluable local support in coordinating the camera deployment, ensuring a smooth and efficient installation process. All video feeds were connected to GoodVision's embedded AI unit, which processes data locally at the edge—no need for complex cloud infrastructure or data center setup.
GoodVision software engineers connected the video streams to the system, defined and fine-tuned parking space zones, and calibrated detection models for both day and night conditions. The setup was validated and went live the same day.
Within hours, real-time dashboards were operational, providing live parking status and historical analytics. The City of Aarhus also received API access, enabling seamless integration with municipal systems.
Traditional traffic monitoring systems require extensive backend infrastructure, lengthy integration cycles, and ongoing maintenance. GoodVision's edge-based approach processes video data locally, delivering:
The Aarhus deployment now provides:
This isn't a proof of concept. It's a live system delivering actionable data to city planners and accessibility advocates.
If you're considering AI-powered traffic or parking monitoring, the Aarhus case study demonstrates three critical success factors:
This deployment is part of the EIT Urban Mobility RAPTOR 2025 programme, which supports innovative urban mobility solutions across Europe. The funding structure enables a unique advantage: proven technology can be replicated in other cities with minimal cost barriers.
We're open to running similar pilots in additional European cities. The Aarhus deployment serves as a blueprint - validated technology, established workflows, and documented results that municipalities can leverage to fast-track their own accessibility initiatives. Contact us today to learn more.
The City of Aarhus pilot runs through November 2025, with a full impact report planned at project close. Potential next steps include:
The takeaway? Modern traffic data collection doesn't require months of planning and deployment. With the right approach (and the right European partnerships) cities can go from concept to live system in a matter of days, not quarters.