Skip to main content

Texas opts for Schneider Electric open road tolling

Schneider Electric is to implement its open road tolling (ORT) solution for Cameron County Regional Mobility Authority’s (CCRMA) expansion of the Port Spur SH550 tolling project in Texas, following successful implementation of the first phase in 2011. The project will link Port Spur to US77, allowing vehicles to bypass the city of Brownsville, ultimately reducing traffic congestion in the area. It will also provide a bypass for local traffic heading to South Padre Island, allowing traffic to be rerouted fro
July 26, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
729 Schneider Electric is to implement its open road tolling (ORT) solution for Cameron County Regional Mobility Authority’s (CCRMA) expansion of the Port Spur SH550 tolling project in Texas, following successful implementation of the first phase in 2011.

The project will link Port Spur to US77, allowing vehicles to bypass the city of Brownsville, ultimately reducing traffic congestion in the area. It will also provide a bypass for local traffic heading to South Padre Island, allowing traffic to be rerouted from US77 to Port Isabel Highway.
 
Schneider Electric will install advanced tolling software and hardware including multi-protocol readers, sensors, and high-resolution digital cameras to enable detection and classification of vehicles at highway speeds. The system, which will help reduce travel times and maximise efficiency of the toll collection process, will identify vehicles using image capture and toll tag identification. The system will also utilise Schneider Electric’s SmartMobility remote operations and maintenance monitoring tool ((ROMS) to provide real-time monitoring of CCRMA’s tolling network components and ensure reliability and accuracy of the ORT system.

According to Ignacio González, executive vice president, Smart Infrastructure, Schneider Electric, “We are thrilled to continue to be a part of the SH550 project. CCRMA is a leader in using cutting-edge technology to make its road operate at maximum efficiency, and implementing ORT is the perfect solution to take this project through the next phase.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Q-Free introduces latest back-office tolling technology
    September 18, 2024
    Q-Free is celebrating the launch of its newest and most comprehensive tolling back-office system. After years of development with insight from global tolling giants, Intrada Operational Back Office is already in play across Portugal, but it makes its major international debut here in Dubai.
  • Idris paves the way for loop based speed enforcement
    February 1, 2012
    With the Idris system now validated as a speed verification tool, the way is open for loops to be used in more complex enforcement applications. Diamond Consulting Services (DCS), developer of the Idris inductive loop-based vehicle detection and classification system, has recently successfully conducted validation trials which, the company says, open the way for Idris to be used for speed verification and loop-based sensors to be used for more complex applications such as speed-on-green and differential spe
  • Enforcement ensures equity for toll road users
    January 25, 2018
    All-electronic tolling boosts traffic flow but introduces the tricky question of enforcement. Workable solutions are starting to emerge. Enforcement is an essential part of tolling and one of the most important ways for a mobility agency to keep faith with its investors, its community stakeholders and the vast majority of its users. It can also be one of the most unpopular and contentious things a toll authority has to undertake. If tolling is about paying for the roads, then everyone has to pay their
  • Lights are green for Iteris' $1.3m synchronisation initiative in Orange County
    August 28, 2023
    Orange County Transit Authority funds five-year deal in City of La Habra, California