Skip to main content

Live demonstrations at 2010 ITS annual meeting

The practical, day-to-day co-working which goes on at Houston TranStar will form a major part of the demonstrations at the 2010 Annual Meeting, says co-chair of the organising committee Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Chief of Police Thomas C. Lambert.
August 2, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Harris County Chief of Police Thomas C. Lambert.
RSSThe practical, day-to-day co-working which goes on at 61 Houston Transtar will form a major part of the demonstrations at the 2010 Annual Meeting, says co-chair of the organising committee Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Chief of Police Thomas C. Lambert.

"Visitors will be able to see how city, county and state transit engineers work together to monitor traffic conditions including real-time travel speeds and tolling/HOT facilities." Four partners - the 375 Texas Department of Transportation, Harris County, the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County and the City of Houston - support Houston TranStar, the first centre in the US to combine transportation and emergency management under one roof. Houston TranStar's website, nationally and locally recognised for the breadth of information it offers the general public, allows subscribers to receive personalised travel time updates and incident warnings, as well as providing up-to-the-minute traffic and weather information.

According to the 232 Texas Transportation Institute, TranStar's transportation management activities have reduced the public's travel times and fuel consumption (more than $1.6 billion saved since the programme's inception), and has lowered exhaust emissions (3,157 tons of hydrocarbons, 20,899 tons of carbon monoxide and 4,375 tons of nitrogen oxides).

In 2006, travel delays cost the region more than $714 million. However, by actively managing traffic incidents and providing travel information to the public, Houston TranStar offset travel delays in the region by more than 12 million vehicle hours, for a monetary benefit of $228.8 million. The reduced travel time lowered fuel consumption by 22.7 million gallons, for an additional saving of more than $57 million, or a total of $286 million in benefits to the region.

"TranStar operates as an ideas clearing house," Lambert explains. "There are weekly management meetings which look at issues such as incident management and clearance and how the available technologies are leveraged by the multiple partners." For the Annual Meeting, a simulated major incident, in the form of an overturned 18-wheeler truck, will be used to show the benefits of better inter-agency working.

"We'll have helicopter units bringing back images of the route in question and visitors will be able to see demonstrations of incident management and re-routing," Lambert continues.

Guided bus tours will offer the opportunity to see how various modes of transport have been linked together, and the efforts being made to increase capacity on existing HOV lanes. The evacuation corridors and techniques developed for Houston and Dallas in light of such catastrophic events as hurricanes Rita and Ike can also be viewed.

"We also have a lot of tolled facilities in the region," says Lambert, "and there'll be the opportunity to see how these and HOT facilities have evolved."
RSS

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ‘Shining moment of opportunity for tolling’
    May 5, 2021
    Climate change is already affecting tolling operations in many parts of the world. IBTTA’s Bill Cramer explains how the sector can be seen as a proven funding and financing mechanism for surface transportation
  • Uber wins right to challenge TfL’s English language requirement
    September 2, 2016
    Uber has won the right to challenge a Transport for London (TfL) rule which would require some of its drivers to pass an English language test. Announced by TfL last year and due to take effect from 1 October, the rule would mean that drivers who are not from English-speaking countries would have to take an English reading, writing and listening test, which TfL said was ‘in the interests of public safety’. Uber had previously supported the test, but now argues it is too rigorous and costly.
  • Re-timing traffic signals delivers cost benefits
    June 28, 2012
    Nashville's signal optimisation programme produced a stunning return on investment. Are those results exceptional? Could similar results be replicated in cities across the US and indeed the world? ITS International spoke to Chris Rhodes, P.E. of Kimley-Horn and Associates, project leader for the Nashville signal optimisation programme. "You have to bear in mind that with signal optimisation programmes you don't see, for instance, physical construction or new pieces of equipment on the roadside that someone
  • Transport Ministers from 53 countries meet for global summit
    May 2, 2012
    Transport Ministers from the 53 member countries of the International Transport Forum (ITF) at the OECD gather in Leipzig, Germany, today for a three-day summit on the future of global mobility. The 2012 summit is headlined ‘Seamless Transport: Making Connections’ and will ask how better connectivity can improve lives and stimulate the economy. Angel Gurría, secretary-general of the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), will be the keynote speaker on 3 May.