Savings by Texan public agencies are major factors in the recent ITS Texas awards, recognising beneficial initiatives in bridge strike prevention and traffic intersection control. In the first, the 
     
This is saving a minimum of $2m a year by encouraging OHV drivers approaching on interstate highway 10 (I-10), which crosses the conurbation west-to-east, to enter, as an alternative, the I-610 Loop, which intersects I-10 at two points. The Loop marks the effective boundary of the city centre. The innermost of three beltways, it offers a safe - if slightly longer and sometimes more congested – option to the I-10, which has several low-clearance bridges.
     
In January 2015, following continuing hits on these (including 35 hits in 2014), the city reacted, working through the 
     
 
Dynamic message
     
Each unit is integrated with a dedicated dynamic message sign (DMS) that activates whenever the sensor generates an alarm and presents the OHV driver with a single-phase, three-line message:  ‘OVERHEIGHT MUST EXIT I-160’. A fixed 
     
The average number of alerts raised is 64 per day on I-10 West and 27 per day on I-10 East. Evaluations carried out in 2015 and 2016 showed increases in trucks using the advised alternative route of 5-7%, while bridge hits reduced by two-thirds - from 35 in 2014 to 12 in both 2015 and 2016.
 
Several other TxDOT districts have deployed Trigg systems, but none are integrated with cameras and DMS. Pietrzyk explained: “Other OHVDS deployments tend to focus on specific locations. We are intercepting and alerting all OHVs approaching along I-10 and then directing them around the city centre.”
     
On  possible expansions, he added: “Until enforcement can be fully  integrated, further deployment is not warranted.” Violation photos are  currently archived for analysis and research; using them for enforcement  – and, potentially, compensation -  will need a change in Texas state  law.
     
The scheme archives  are held by the Texas Transportation Institute (TTI), which  issues  regular status summaries. It contributed to the creation of TranStar,  and developed and maintains the software underpinning its central  information hub.
     
Advice  and warnings reach the travelling public through the TranStar website,  DMS, and subscribers’ mobile phones and email accounts. The website  traffic map reaches a million users a month.
     
 
Signal success
     
The  second ITS Texas award winner is the city of Baytown, a few minutes’  drive east of Houston. It is a major hub for oil refining, and the  chemical, plastics and rubber manufacturing industries, for which its  three main north-south traffic corridors - Garth Road, State Highway  (SH) 146 and Main Street – are key links.
     
These  have been regularly impacted by the atypical or unpredictable  congestion generated by the heavy industrial base. Garth Road, for  example (a 6km, five-lane corridor), does not have a normal morning  peak. Analysis of intersection traffic counts (now refined by new system  controllers) has shown that flows typically continue to build up all  morning until after midday, when they break for a couple of hours before  resurging to an afternoon peak.
     
In  2016, the city won a $773,000-plus grant from TxDOT for converting the  first two corridors from standard time-of-day (TOD) to adaptive signal  timing - a total cost of $967,163, with Baytown paying US$193,433 as a  20% contribution.
     
The city  also paid $260,000, again from its own funds, to upgrade Main Street.  The combined funding has secured deployments at 37 signalised  intersections along all three corridors. The system runs on a central  core of 
     
“Our  roadway network is now able to handle its traffic because of the  adaptive system,” Baytown traffic engineer Matthew Johnson told ITS  International.
 
     
 
Fallback mode
     
The   technology proved its worth when, on 23 May 2017, the new server   suffered a nine-hour power outage and corridor management returned to   fallback mode, using the earlier TOD programming. Johnson continued:   “While this wrought havoc for road users for almost nine hours, it   allowed us to analyse and compare the performance of the corridor under   both before and after conditions.”
     
Having   pulled the traffic counts for a Garth Road intersection for both 23  May  2017 and 22 May 2018 - and established that flows were virtually   identical – the city then pulled the relevant travel time data (see   table 1). It found that the new system was working as it should on 22   May 2018, while the TOD alternative had performed badly a year earlier.
     
Overall   travel times are now 55-60% of what they were, reducing road user   opportunity cost, greenhouse gas emissions and fuel consumption. (On the   first point, using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis division   of the US Department of Commerce, the city was able to put the figure   for the nine hours during which the new server was down at $49,883).
     
The   decision to self-install “was not easy”, said Johnson. “But it has  paid  off, allowing us to save roughly $10,000 per intersection -   approximately one third that of the equipment - and develop our own   staff. 
     
They now know how   the system works, and can fix almost any issue. They have grown in   ability and confidence, creating a culture of ownership and decreasing   turnover. We hope our work can help other mid-sized US cities.”
     
ITS   Texas president Tony Voigt told ITS International: “These agencies  were  looking for unique applications to address their problems, and   ITS-based solutions were the best fit”.
    
        
        
        



