Doing more with what you have: real-time passenger insight for Australia’s brownfield networks

Australia’s railways are built to last, and at KeTech we focus on ensuring the systems that support how the railway operates – and how it is used – can do the same. Our experience in retrofitting and system integration shows that long-term value is not created through repeated full-system replacement, but by managing obsolescence and enabling systems to integrate across generations of assets. KeTech delivers passenger information systems that combine intelligent software with both legacy and modern equipment, adding capability, resilience and insight while keeping disruption and cost under control.

With budgets under pressure, investment is often focused on trains, signalling and capacity, while passenger information systems are expected to outlast their original design life. As these systems become central to operations and disruption management, their ability to integrate and evolve is now as important as their initial functionality. From KeTech’s experience working with rail operators globally, this pattern is familiar. Passenger information is rarely the first system upgraded, yet it is one of the most visible and one of the most relied upon when services are disrupted or operating under pressure.

In recent Australian reviews passenger communication is highlighted as a core improvement area. The 2025 Independent Rail Review in New South Wales highlights that perceptions of service reliability are shaped as much by disruption communication as by train performance. At the same time, initiatives such as the NSW Digital Systems Program are modernising train control and signalling, generating richer and more continuous operational data. If operators are investing in a more connected railway, the systems that translate that data into clear, trusted passenger guidance must be able to keep pace.

Retrofitting over replacement

A common assumption in planning is that meaningful improvement requires all-at-once replacement: new screens, new hardware and expensive overhauls. In practice, this approach is often impractical for Australia’s predominantly brownfield networks.

KeTech’s work across similar complex UK rail environments shows that a more sustainable, cost-effective path is retrofitting legacy equipment – retaining proven hardware while upgrading the software intelligence that drives it. Done properly, this extends asset life, reduces risk and allows capability to evolve incrementally, without the disruption associated with full system replacement.

Retrofitting passenger information in an operational railway is not simply a software upgrade. It requires deep integration skills, working across legacy protocols, control systems, onboard equipment and station assets – while maintaining reliability and meeting assurance requirements. This is where integration-led approaches differ fundamentally from screen-led upgrades.

Obsolescence brings this challenge into focus. Unsupported operating systems and ageing architectures increase maintenance effort, limit integration and introduce cyber risk. Australian cyber guidance increasingly emphasises patching and supportability as baseline controls, something legacy-locked systems struggle to deliver over time. By decoupling software

intelligence from physical assets, KeTech enables operators to modernise capability while keeping proven hardware in service.

Beyond information: insight and passenger flow

For more than 20 years, KeTech has delivered real-time passenger information systems to rail operators. Over that time, these platforms have evolved well beyond simple messaging. Today, it provides operational insight as well as a better passenger experience.

Real-time passenger counting gives operators’ visibility into how services are being used, supporting dwell-time management, more informed disruption response and safer operations during peak periods. When shared consistently across the network, this insight becomes a practical, real-time decision-making tool rather than a static reporting metric. When combined with dynamic platform wayfinding, the same intelligence can actively influence passenger movement, helping distribute passengers along platforms and reduce pressure on staff and infrastructure. Delivered as part of a single, integrated platform, passenger counting, wayfinding and passenger information reinforce one another, sharing a common operational truth rather than operating as disconnected systems.

KeTech’s systems also deliver enriched, tailored journey information that reflects the realities of modern travel. Passengers can be informed in advance about onboard facilities such as toilets, food and drink services, accessible amenities and bike storage, before a train arrives. This information is updated automatically using live data feeds, decreasing reliance on manual intervention and helping increase passenger trust so they can make better informed decisions about their journey.

Why long-term integration expertise matters

Australia’s railways are built to last, and the systems that support them must do the same. From KeTech’s experience, the greatest long-term value comes from platforms designed to integrate across generations of assets and can evolve with operator and passenger needs in the future. By combining intelligent software with both legacy and modern equipment, integration-led passenger information systems can make existing assets perform “better than new” adding capability, resilience and insight while keeping disruption and budget spend under control.

Australia’s rail investment pipeline remains strong, but funding pressure is real. Operators are upgrading trains, signalling and connectivity and with that comes more data than ever before. The challenge for operators is turning that data into reliable, real-time passenger information. KeTech’s approach is to equip operators with systems that can integrate, adapt to manage obsolescence rather than simply replacing what already exists.

At KeTech, we believe passenger information systems should evolve continuously and are built to keep up with railways that have been built to last.

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