The company said it was selected for the “2026 Gyeonggi-do AI Challenge Program,” hosted by the Gyeonggi Business & Science Accelerator, and will build an AI-based platform to crack down on illegal parking and stopping by cargo trucks.
The program aims to identify public services that address local problems and brings together local governments, public agencies and private AI companies. Projects were evaluated for practical use in real administrative settings, the company said.
Open Network System proposed a platform called “CargoClick” through a consortium with Ansan City and Korea University’s Convergence Research Institute. It was ultimately selected in the AI administration category after document screening and a presentation review, the company said. The project is based on an administrative innovation cooperation framework previously signed by Ansan City with KT and Korea University.
CargoClick aims to automate the entire enforcement process for illegal parking and stopping by large trucks — from an initial warning to a second-stage crackdown and issuance of administrative fines — to reduce the workload for public officials and speed up processing, the company said.
Illegal parking has been cited as a major cause of disrupted traffic flow and threats to pedestrian safety. The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport and local governments have said long-term illegal parking by large vehicles remains a management target because it can raise accident risks on narrow side streets.
The platform will also include a chatbot for drivers, providing guidance on enforcement standards and nearby parking locations and availability to encourage compliance in advance. Collected data will be visualized to analyze regional patterns of illegal parking and stopping and to help set enforcement zones or develop parking policies, the company said.
AI-driven administrative automation has been expanding in the public sector, with decision-support systems applied in areas such as civil complaint response, traffic management and urban safety to improve efficiency and policy accuracy, the company said.
Open Network System said it plans to develop the platform by November and apply it in Ansan City. The company said it expects the system to shorten administrative processing time, encourage voluntary compliance by drivers and support data-based policy operations.
Chief Executive Park Bong-gyun said the goal is “to achieve both improved administrative efficiency and tangible benefits that residents can feel,” adding that the company plans to expand its AI platform business in the public sector starting with the Ansan rollout.
* This article has been translated by AI.
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