Author: James D. Carvell
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Express highways
Languages : en
Pages : 202
Book Description
This report documents the development of a comprehensive plan for implementation of Intelligent Transportation Systems in the Dallas area. Objectives, findings, and recommendations are summarized as follows: 1. Develop a Broadly Based Steering Committee - A committee was formed with representatives from various transportation-related agencies including ten cities, Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), Dallas County, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, North Central Texas Council of Governments, FHWA, universities, several consultants, and other private sector companies. 2. Assess Existing TMS and Potential ITS Technology - An inventory of existing traffic management systems and transportation facilities was compiled. Thirty of the cities in the study area were surveyed to determine incident management procedures and to identify particular problems or needs. 3. Identify Institutional Issues and Legal Barriers - A workshop was held to examine any potential institutional issues which might be barriers to area-wide traffic management. It was generally agreed that a regional concept was essential, but not necessarily as a regional control center. The cities still wanted to have control of traffic management within their particular jurisdiction but were open to cooperative operation for incident conditions across city limit lines. Under incident conditions, predetermined, jointly developed signal timing plans would be called for from a Dallas Area Transportation Management Center (DATMC). 4. Develop an Implementable, Area-Wide Multi-Jurisdictional ITS Plan - Projects are defined for both freeway and surface street systems. Included are ATMS, ATIS, APTS, AVSS (AVCS), and CVO elements and their interaction. The DATMC will be operated by TxDOT but with sharing of video images and traffic data among the various operating issues over a wide-area network. Since a communications backbone network will not be in place for some time, much of the CCTV system will initially be in compressed video format transmitted over leased ISDN lines. The recommended plan reflects both State and National Architecture efforts. 5. Develop Costs, Benefits, and an Implementation Plan - Costs, benefits, and a staged implementation plan were developed and emphasize near-term improvements to incident management procedures, mobility assistance patrol upgrades, and other ITS elements. A medium- and long-term implementation plan is specified. A benefit:cost ratio of 17:1 was estimated for the recommended plan.
Dallas Area-wide Intelligent Transportation System Plan
Author: James D. Carvell
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Express highways
Languages : en
Pages : 202
Book Description
This report documents the development of a comprehensive plan for implementation of Intelligent Transportation Systems in the Dallas area. Objectives, findings, and recommendations are summarized as follows: 1. Develop a Broadly Based Steering Committee - A committee was formed with representatives from various transportation-related agencies including ten cities, Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), Dallas County, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, North Central Texas Council of Governments, FHWA, universities, several consultants, and other private sector companies. 2. Assess Existing TMS and Potential ITS Technology - An inventory of existing traffic management systems and transportation facilities was compiled. Thirty of the cities in the study area were surveyed to determine incident management procedures and to identify particular problems or needs. 3. Identify Institutional Issues and Legal Barriers - A workshop was held to examine any potential institutional issues which might be barriers to area-wide traffic management. It was generally agreed that a regional concept was essential, but not necessarily as a regional control center. The cities still wanted to have control of traffic management within their particular jurisdiction but were open to cooperative operation for incident conditions across city limit lines. Under incident conditions, predetermined, jointly developed signal timing plans would be called for from a Dallas Area Transportation Management Center (DATMC). 4. Develop an Implementable, Area-Wide Multi-Jurisdictional ITS Plan - Projects are defined for both freeway and surface street systems. Included are ATMS, ATIS, APTS, AVSS (AVCS), and CVO elements and their interaction. The DATMC will be operated by TxDOT but with sharing of video images and traffic data among the various operating issues over a wide-area network. Since a communications backbone network will not be in place for some time, much of the CCTV system will initially be in compressed video format transmitted over leased ISDN lines. The recommended plan reflects both State and National Architecture efforts. 5. Develop Costs, Benefits, and an Implementation Plan - Costs, benefits, and a staged implementation plan were developed and emphasize near-term improvements to incident management procedures, mobility assistance patrol upgrades, and other ITS elements. A medium- and long-term implementation plan is specified. A benefit:cost ratio of 17:1 was estimated for the recommended plan.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Express highways
Languages : en
Pages : 202
Book Description
This report documents the development of a comprehensive plan for implementation of Intelligent Transportation Systems in the Dallas area. Objectives, findings, and recommendations are summarized as follows: 1. Develop a Broadly Based Steering Committee - A committee was formed with representatives from various transportation-related agencies including ten cities, Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), Dallas County, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, North Central Texas Council of Governments, FHWA, universities, several consultants, and other private sector companies. 2. Assess Existing TMS and Potential ITS Technology - An inventory of existing traffic management systems and transportation facilities was compiled. Thirty of the cities in the study area were surveyed to determine incident management procedures and to identify particular problems or needs. 3. Identify Institutional Issues and Legal Barriers - A workshop was held to examine any potential institutional issues which might be barriers to area-wide traffic management. It was generally agreed that a regional concept was essential, but not necessarily as a regional control center. The cities still wanted to have control of traffic management within their particular jurisdiction but were open to cooperative operation for incident conditions across city limit lines. Under incident conditions, predetermined, jointly developed signal timing plans would be called for from a Dallas Area Transportation Management Center (DATMC). 4. Develop an Implementable, Area-Wide Multi-Jurisdictional ITS Plan - Projects are defined for both freeway and surface street systems. Included are ATMS, ATIS, APTS, AVSS (AVCS), and CVO elements and their interaction. The DATMC will be operated by TxDOT but with sharing of video images and traffic data among the various operating issues over a wide-area network. Since a communications backbone network will not be in place for some time, much of the CCTV system will initially be in compressed video format transmitted over leased ISDN lines. The recommended plan reflects both State and National Architecture efforts. 5. Develop Costs, Benefits, and an Implementation Plan - Costs, benefits, and a staged implementation plan were developed and emphasize near-term improvements to incident management procedures, mobility assistance patrol upgrades, and other ITS elements. A medium- and long-term implementation plan is specified. A benefit:cost ratio of 17:1 was estimated for the recommended plan.
Intelligent Transportation Systems
Author: Sundaravalli Narayanaswami
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
ISBN: 1527591255
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 398
Book Description
Transportation-related challenges exist all over the world, with all countries struggling to develop efficient, effective and user-friendly transportation systems. Today, policy agencies and financing institutions are keen to invest heavily for a potentially good transport systems, as good mobility is pertinent to social growth and a sustainable environment. Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) have become a global area of growth in recent times because of increasing demand for mobility, rampant urbanization, and depleting energy reserves. Existing conventional transport infrastructure fails to meet the ever-increasing demand; building additional transportation infrastructure is cumbersome, as it is time-consuming and capital-intensive and available land space is very limited. Therefore, there is a pressing need for innovative and locally relevant systems that can be built rapidly with less investment by leveraging advances in technology. Good ITS enable informed decision-making for all stakeholders. This book presents the ingredients of good ITS, not from a technology perspective, but from a business administration, management, and policy perspective. The emphasis is on practice-oriented, impactful and context relevant systems. Short, real-life case studies are presented for each topic, to keep the discerning transportation enthusiast engaged.
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
ISBN: 1527591255
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 398
Book Description
Transportation-related challenges exist all over the world, with all countries struggling to develop efficient, effective and user-friendly transportation systems. Today, policy agencies and financing institutions are keen to invest heavily for a potentially good transport systems, as good mobility is pertinent to social growth and a sustainable environment. Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) have become a global area of growth in recent times because of increasing demand for mobility, rampant urbanization, and depleting energy reserves. Existing conventional transport infrastructure fails to meet the ever-increasing demand; building additional transportation infrastructure is cumbersome, as it is time-consuming and capital-intensive and available land space is very limited. Therefore, there is a pressing need for innovative and locally relevant systems that can be built rapidly with less investment by leveraging advances in technology. Good ITS enable informed decision-making for all stakeholders. This book presents the ingredients of good ITS, not from a technology perspective, but from a business administration, management, and policy perspective. The emphasis is on practice-oriented, impactful and context relevant systems. Short, real-life case studies are presented for each topic, to keep the discerning transportation enthusiast engaged.
Department of Transportation's Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Projects Book
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic traffic controls
Languages : en
Pages : 524
Book Description
Contains summaries of current U.S. intelligent transportation systems projects.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic traffic controls
Languages : en
Pages : 524
Book Description
Contains summaries of current U.S. intelligent transportation systems projects.
Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) in Texas: Deployment Summary and Case Study of Deployment Methodologies
Author: David Terrance Ory
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 94
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 94
Book Description
Department of Transportation's Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Projects
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic traffic controls
Languages : en
Pages : 440
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Electronic traffic controls
Languages : en
Pages : 440
Book Description
Cost of Ownership of Intelligent Transportation Systems in the California Transportation Infrastructure
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Infrastructure (Economics)
Languages : en
Pages : 222
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Infrastructure (Economics)
Languages : en
Pages : 222
Book Description
Implementation of the National Intelligent Transportation Systems Program
Author: United States. Federal Highway Administration
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Intelligent transportation systems
Languages : en
Pages : 164
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Intelligent transportation systems
Languages : en
Pages : 164
Book Description
Traffic Signal Retiming Practices in the United States
Author: Robert L. Gordon
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISBN: 0309143179
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 92
Book Description
TRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 409: Traffic Signal Retiming Practices in the United States explores practices that operating agencies currently use to revise traffic signal timing. The report examines the processes used to develop, install, verify, fine-tune, and evaluate the plans--
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISBN: 0309143179
Category : Technology & Engineering
Languages : en
Pages : 92
Book Description
TRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 409: Traffic Signal Retiming Practices in the United States explores practices that operating agencies currently use to revise traffic signal timing. The report examines the processes used to develop, install, verify, fine-tune, and evaluate the plans--
Investigation of Sources of Freeway Speed Data in the Dallas Area and Presentation to Traveling Public by Electronics Means
Author: James D. Carvell
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Automatic data collection systems
Languages : en
Pages : 94
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Automatic data collection systems
Languages : en
Pages : 94
Book Description
Driver-based Cellular/PCS Incident Detection System Implementation Plan for Dallas
Author: C. H. Walters
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Cell phones
Languages : en
Pages : 74
Book Description
Critical to intelligent transportation systems (ITS) is an efficient form of surveillance on freeways to detect incidents. Traditionally, loop detectors or another form of passive detection have been used to meet this need. Due to the high cost, difficulty of timely installation, and limited funding available to deploy ITS systems, the traditional system has been slow to develop in the Dallas area. This research assesses the feasibility of substituting driver-based incident detection using cellular phones for traditional passive detection. The study is divided into five major tasks: (1) summary of current cellular incident reporting services; (2) identification of issues and potential effectiveness of cellular incident detection in Dallas; (3) development of an implementation plan for driver-based cellular detection; (4) comparison of traditional and cellular incident detection methods; and (5) identification of potential funding sources for the implementation plan. This document concentrates on reporting on the development of the implementation plan for driver-based cellular detection in Dallas. Based on evaluation of existing driver-based cellular incident detection programs and interviews with local public safety officials, researchers decided to rely on the existing 911 system for incident detection instead of having a new number, such as *999, created. Based on this decision, the implementation plan contained four major components: (1) driver education campaign, (2) deployment of reference location signs on the freeway network, (3) establishment of communication interfaces between local 911 centers and TxDOT's Dallas Traffic Management Center, and (4) expansion of CCTV camera network for incident verification. All of these components combined together will form an effective incident detection and verification system that should allow the deployment of passive detection, such as loop detectors, to be scaled back accordingly.
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Cell phones
Languages : en
Pages : 74
Book Description
Critical to intelligent transportation systems (ITS) is an efficient form of surveillance on freeways to detect incidents. Traditionally, loop detectors or another form of passive detection have been used to meet this need. Due to the high cost, difficulty of timely installation, and limited funding available to deploy ITS systems, the traditional system has been slow to develop in the Dallas area. This research assesses the feasibility of substituting driver-based incident detection using cellular phones for traditional passive detection. The study is divided into five major tasks: (1) summary of current cellular incident reporting services; (2) identification of issues and potential effectiveness of cellular incident detection in Dallas; (3) development of an implementation plan for driver-based cellular detection; (4) comparison of traditional and cellular incident detection methods; and (5) identification of potential funding sources for the implementation plan. This document concentrates on reporting on the development of the implementation plan for driver-based cellular detection in Dallas. Based on evaluation of existing driver-based cellular incident detection programs and interviews with local public safety officials, researchers decided to rely on the existing 911 system for incident detection instead of having a new number, such as *999, created. Based on this decision, the implementation plan contained four major components: (1) driver education campaign, (2) deployment of reference location signs on the freeway network, (3) establishment of communication interfaces between local 911 centers and TxDOT's Dallas Traffic Management Center, and (4) expansion of CCTV camera network for incident verification. All of these components combined together will form an effective incident detection and verification system that should allow the deployment of passive detection, such as loop detectors, to be scaled back accordingly.