Delta Scientific presents the DSC50 ‘S’ temporary vehicle barrier for urban use

August 7, 2025

Delta Scientific has developed the DSC50 ‘S’ Barrier, a new temporary vehicle restraint system designed for safety-critical applications in inner-city areas. The modular and mobile barrier has been tested in accordance with international crash standards and offers effective protection against unauthorised vehicle access – without the need for pre-installation or anchoring in the ground.

The design is based on a modular system with a low height and allows flexible adaptation to changing application scenarios, such as large events, temporary traffic management, demonstrations or short-term hazardous situations. The absence of permanent infrastructure makes the system particularly suitable for municipalities, emergency services and operators of public spaces who require temporary security measures with short response times.

With its slim profile and modular design, the DSC50 ‘S’ blends seamlessly into the overall aesthetic of its surroundings, making it the solution for:

  • Events, parades and urban celebrations
  • Tourist corridors and pop-up activities
  • Protest areas and emergency crowd control
  • Short-term construction sites or traffic control centres

The DSC50 ‘S’ uses Delta Scientific’s proven anti-ram technology, which has previously been used in stationary high-security applications. In this version, it now enables a mobile solution with high retention performance, short set-up times and minimal intrusion into the traffic area. The barrier is currently being tested in selected cities, with a wider market launch planned.

Related Articles

Resilience needs proof: Why tested recovery is crucial

Tested restore processes prove genuine recoverability in an emergency. In many IT environments, digital resilience is still equated with technical security. Redundant storage systems, defined snapshot plans, replication or successfully completed backup jobs convey a...

Robots will soon feel as reliably as humans

Artificial skin developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge is as sensitive as a fingertip Researchers at the University of Cambridge (https://www.cam.ac.uk/) have developed a sensitive artificial skin that gives robots a sense of touch very similar to...

Share This