Skip to main content

Missouri’s Road to Tomorrow provides ITS answers

Andrew Bardin Williams looks at Missouri’s plans to become America’s ITS testbed The state of Missouri launched its Road to Tomorrow initiative earlier this summer at the ITS America Annual Meeting and Expo in Pittsburgh, rolling out the welcome mat for transportation officials to try out new, innovative ITS technologies in the field.
December 22, 2015 Read time: 4 mins
Missouri was the birthplace of America’s interstate system.

Andrew Bardin Williams looks at Missouri’s plans to become America’s ITS testbed

The state of Missouri launched its Road to Tomorrow initiative earlier this summer at the 560 ITS America Annual Meeting and Expo in Pittsburgh, rolling out the welcome mat for transportation officials to try out new, innovative ITS technologies in the field.

Using a 320km (200-mile) stretch of I-70 between St. Louis and Kansas City, the project hopes to foster innovation in the transportation industry to improve the efficiency and safety of roadways while developing new ways to pay for transportation improvements. Some suggestions so far have been smart cars, self-driving vehicles and solar roadways.

“We’re not going to say no to anyone,” said Thomas Blair, assistant district engineer for the St. Louis Metro District. “We’re seeking innovators, vendors, solution providers, students—even people not in the transportation or construction industries—anyone with an idea. We want people to help us come up with innovative ways to construct, manage, maintain and fund our roadways.”

The stretch of I-70 to be used as the testbed is being built is the birthplace of the US Interstate System. Missouri was the first state to begin construction shortly after the 1956 bill was signed into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower—a distinction not lost on the 1773 Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT).

“It’s only appropriate that the re-birth of the nation’s interstate system begins at its birthplace,” said Stephen R. Miller, Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission (MHTC) chairman. “Missouri has always been at the heart of highway transportation—not only because the state’s geographic location puts it at the nation’s core, but also because of the role it’s played in the realization of Eisenhower’s dream.”

While innovation and transportation funding are the focus of the initiative, improving road safety is also a motivation for developing the next generation highway system. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, there were 32,719 fatalities on US roads in 2013, and it makes sense that the road of the future would significantly reduce that rate.

A multidisciplinary team from MoDOT led by Blair has been assigned to come up with a set of proposals before the state legislature convenes in January to begin negotiations over road transportation funding in the state. Like other DOTs around America, Missouri is struggling to fund repairs for a crumbling infrastructure. Not only will the road of the future be safer, more reliable and more efficient, the goal is to make roadways self-funding—perhaps with a subscription model or other funding innovation.

There is no timetable for the project. Pressed further, Blair predicted that the Road to Tomorrow initiative could live up to 10 years, comparing it to the eight years it took NASA to put a man on the moon while reiterating that innovation doesn’t come overnight. Regardless, the state views this as a long-term project—one that if successful can be replicated on other roadways across the US.

In addition to the interstate, the testbed will include surrounding road infrastructure along the entire 320km (200 miles) of the I-70 that runs through the middle of Missouri from St. Louis in the east and Kansas City in the west. Called Missouri’s main street, nearly 20% of the state’s businesses and 25% of the state’s jobs lie within 16km (10 miles) of the interstate. The testbed area also includes 67,535 census blocks, 220 interchanges, 1,540 churches, 1,506 schools, 364 public-use buildings, 337 cemeteries, 220 parks, 77 radio towers, 74 U.S. Post Offices, 69 public-use airports, 66 hospitals, 39 colleges and universities and 38 lakes—making the area perfectly suited to deploy and test just about any ITS technology in any application.

FACT File: Missouri’s Road to Tomorrow

- Runs for 320km from St. Louis to Kansas City along the I-70

- Around 20% of Missouri’s businesses and 25% of its jobs are within 16km (10 miles).

- The testbed area includes: 67,535 census blocks, 220 interchanges, 220 parks, 77 radio towers, 69 public-use airports, 66 hospitals, 39 colleges and universities and 38 lakes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Consortium wins US$648 million highway project
    May 27, 2015
    I-77 Mobility Partners, a consortium led by Cintra Infraestructuras, a subsidiary of Ferrovial, has finalised a US$648 million contract with the North Carolina Department of Transportation. The group will design and construct 26 miles of toll lanes on Interstate 77 in North Carolina.
  • Clear Blue illuminates Pennsylvania highway 
    December 11, 2020
    Deployment at the American Parkway follows an initial pilot phase in 2019
  • Transport can build legacy of hope
    November 30, 2020
    Racial and social injustice has come to the fore this year. Samuel Johnson, IBTTA president and Transportation Corridor Agencies CEO, explains what the industry can do to build ‘a legacy of hope and progress’
  • Largest solar highway project in the US opens to rest stop visitors
    August 24, 2012
    One year after breaking ground, the largest solar highway project in the US — a partnership between Portland General Electric and the Oregon Department of Transportation — is now open to visitors stopping to take a break from their travels along Interstate 5 in Oregon. Growing clean, renewable energy amongst farm fields of corn and cabbage, the Baldock Solar Station is a 1.75-megawatt solar array boasting nearly 7,000 solar panels across seven acres of the Baldock Safety Rest Area, located on Interstate 5 n