The 
     
The programme is a national effort to deploy, test and operationalise cutting-edge mobile and roadside technologies and enable CV applications to save lives, improve personal mobility, enhance economic productivity, and reduce environmental impacts. USDoT has designated three connected vehicle pilots – Wyoming, New York City and Tampa, Florida – to deploy connected vehicles on city streets and highways.
     
Starting in September 2015 with each site preparing a deployment concept, the long-term project will continue through 2019. The three sites are now midway through a 20-month phase 2 which is expected to continue into next year while phase 3 expands the programmes to real-world operation. 
     
Total funding for the three pilot programmes amounts to more than $45 million. Phase 1 was funded completely by USDoT which also provided 80% of the funding for phases 2 and 3, with the local agencies contributing the remaining 20%. In addition to funding, the USDoT is playing an active role in the pilots.
     
“USDoT is a partner,” said Robert Frey, planning director with Tampa-Hillsborough County Expressway Authority (THEA). “They are involved intimately with the process and approve every document. They provide technical expertise in the form of USDoT staff, consultants and support personnel - this is definitely a team project. We have dealt with everything from security to how to strap the roadside units on light poles, and USDoT has been involved in all of it.
     
“All three pilot sites have been working together very closely since the   beginning,” Frey adds. “USDoT is strongly stressing collaboration and   interoperability.”
     
 
Multiple partnerships
     
THEA   is running the Tampa pilot, with a team including 
The  Tampa pilot will be using dedicated short range communication  (DSRC) on  the Selmon Expressway and several streets throughout the  area. The  project’s goals include alleviating congestion and improving  safety  during morning commuting hours; reducing the number of wrong-way  drivers  in express lanes; improving pedestrian safety; and minimising  conflicts  between streetcars and traffic.
      
Frey   explained: “No tax dollars were used for the local match. The entire   local match was provided by THEA. Tampa is lucky that we have two   partners that have undertaken corridor improvements to help make this   project work, the City of Tampa and Florida DoT-D7.” 
    
THEA has  several other collaborators on the pilot. The Center for Urban  Transportation Research (CUTR) at the University of Southern Florida is  handling all the performance measurements and evaluation. In addition,  the University of Arizona Engineering Department is providing ISIG, an  application for roadway operations.
     
THEA  also met with the Crash Avoidance Metrics Partnership (CAMP) – a  consortium of auto OEMs led by 
     
“CAMP  made us rethink a few things. We learned that the automakers do not use  the same vocabulary as the road operators and that their testing  expectations were different. On several applications we changed our  algorithms and vocabulary to better reflect what we were doing,” says  Frey.
     
Another important  collaborator is the Tampa-based public. THEA is currently recruiting  volunteer drivers and pedestrians for the pilot, expecting to equip  approximately 1,600 privately owned automobiles with CV technology by  May 2018.
     
Meanwhile,  pedestrian volunteers are invited to download THEA’s smartphone app that  activates crosswalk signals on Tampa’s Meridian Avenue.
     
Frey  concluded: “I believe the technology is not the focus. Being able to  take the technology and implement it to solve problems is the focus. New  technology will always be coming, but are we visionary enough to use it  for the public good?”
     
 
Hurricane Irma
     
In  the middle of phase 2, the Tampa pilot faced an unexpected challenge.  The second week in September 2017, the world watched as Irma, a category  5 hurricane, battered islands across the Caribbean and moved menacingly  toward Florida. Although the impacts on Tampa were not as severe as  expected, as the hurricane downgraded to category 2, the city still  faced daunting challenges, such as massive power outages. ITS  International asked THEA’s Bob Frey if the hurricane impacted the Tampa  CV pilot.
     
“We have  hurricane season every year, so the transportation professionals in this  area are used to being flexible under these circumstances and the  procedures are in place,” Frey explained. “That makes shifting from our  day-to-day jobs to emergency management easier.”
     
The  impacts Hurricane Irma had on THEA and the Tampa pilot included  suspending work on roads, evacuation meetings, suspension of tolling,  and communication messaging requirements being coordinated with the  local and state governments. Frey says these are all skill sets they  also use on the CV Pilot, “so the Pilot had to take a back seat for a  while.”
     
“Now that the  storm has passed I am happy to report that Hurricane Irma’s arrival did  not impact our overall schedule besides requiring us to make adjustments  to our installation schedule,” he added.
 
     
“When   storms come, we still need to be flexible, but maybe CV technologies   can make these difficult situations a little easier for the average   person to stay safe.”
     
 
Pedestrian safety
     
NYCDoT   is leading the New York City pilot, also in phase 2, with pedestrian   safety as one of its main focuses and two pedestrian applications   forming part of the project. The first alerts vehicles turning into   crosswalks to detect pedestrian presence while the second assists   visually impaired pedestrians in the crosswalk.
     
For   vehicles, the roadside unit (RSU) utilises a traffic signal  controller,  routing an audio message to the driver. For visually  impaired  pedestrians, the RSU detects the pedestrian’s presence in the  crosswalk  or at the intersection corner, and an audio message is sent  to their  smartphone via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, notifying them of the time  remaining  to cross the street.
     
Other   main focuses of the NYC pilot are Vehicle to Vehicle (V2V) and Vehicle   to Infrastructure (V2I) applications and NYCDoT is currently engaged  in  the vendor selection process.
     
The   pilot area encompasses three areas in the boroughs of Manhattan and   Brooklyn including a 6.4km (4mile) segment of FDR Drive. Prior to   real-world deployment, NYCDoT is using a large government-owned parking   lot near JFK Airport for CV demos.
     
In   terms of the fleet, participating entities include UPS plus New York   City’s DoT, Transit Authority, Taxi and Limousine Commission and   Department of Sanitation. Users of the pedestrian application will be   volunteers.
     
According to   the USDoT: “Connected vehicle technology has yet to be deployed in a   high-density environment like New York City. With its mix of high   pedestrian and vehicle traffic and commercial and residential areas, the   New York City Connected Vehicle Pilot will be a model for future   large-scale deployments in urban environments.”
     
 
Wyoming hits the highway
     
Wyoming   DoT (WYDoT) is leading the Wyoming pilot, focused on interstate   highways. Also in phase 2, the project’s goals include improving highway   traffic and weather data in the state’s traffic management centre in   order to reduce the number and severity of adverse weather-related   incidents in the I-80 Corridor.
     
The   Wyoming pilot will trial a number of technologies including forward   collision warning, infrastructure-to-vehicle (I2V) situational   awareness, work zone and spot weather impact warning and distress   notification.
     
WYDoT is   deploying 75 Lear RSUs along highway I-80, and 400 OBUs. Testing will   begin on WYDoT fleet vehicles – including highway patrol vehicles,   snowploughs and other partner vehicles – in the autumn/winter of   2017-2018. The pilot will expand to testing other vehicles in the   autumn/winter of 2018-19.
    
        
        
        



