Skip to main content

Downtown Chattanooga gets smarter

Seoul Robotics will deliver 86 new smart city intersections in Tennessee city
By Adam Hill January 10, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The city will be a living laboratory (© Kevin Ruck | Dreamstime.com)

The City of Chattanooga in Tennessee is to build the largest smart intersection network in the US, with more than 100 intersections covering the entire downtown area.

The US Department of Transportation will fund the $4.5 million programme to install a 'living laboratory' that will be installed throughout 2023 and 2024.

Seoul Robotics will expand its partnership with the Chattanooga Department of Innovation Delivery and Performance, and the Center of Urban Informatics and Progress (CUIP) at the city's University of Tennessee at Chattanooga to deliver 86 new smart city intersections – the largest urban Internet of Things deployment of its kind in the US, the company says.

They have already partnered on the MLK Smart Corridor testbed. First deployed in 2019, it uses Lidar sensors equipped with Seoul Robotics’ 3D perception software SENSR to anonymously detect, track and predict the movement of pedestrians and vehicles.

“Our work in Chattanooga will deliver more than insights into the city. We’re generating a real world, data-informed testing environment for emissions management, pedestrian safety, electric vehicles and more,” said William Muller, vice president of business development at Seoul Robotics.

“With this scalable network of smart intersections, we’re able to capture the most granular level of 3D data that can be used to transform cities today, and in the future.”

Chattanooga intends to use 3D data from the new intersections to prepare for the transition to electric vehicles, mapping the ideal locations to install EV charging stations, as well as using the system's real-time traffic insights to optimise routes in a bid to alleviate congestion and reduce vehicle emissions.

“Our partnership with Seoul Robotics on the MLK Smart Corridor delivered an entirely new dimension of insights beyond what we anticipated," said Dr. Mina Sartipi, CUIP founding director.

"The level of accuracy and actionability has enabled numerous advancements in how we can make our city safer, more efficient, and healthier for the people who live here."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Case makes parking smarter
    May 22, 2012
    It’s an accepted fact that 30 per cent of all road users in downtown areas are driving around looking for a place to park. If those drivers could go direct to parking spaces, there would be a significant reduction in congestion. But that requires an intelligent solution which can pull together real-time data on just where vehicles and parking availability are. SmartParking from Case Systems is exactly that.
  • Columbus, Ohio is named Smart Cities Dive’s city of 2018
    December 5, 2018
    Columbus, Ohio has been named City of the Year in the Smart Cities Dive website’s awards for its work on transit and electrification. The US city won the US Department of Transportation’s inaugural Smart City Challenge two years ago – and is rolling out a variety of smart city-related programmes. Smart Cities Dive said the city’s “biggest area of progress this year” has been its increased reliance on electric vehicles (EVs), including in its bus fleet and other government vehicles. City authoritie
  • Bluecity Lidar helps plan Pune intersection
    September 9, 2022
    Indian city wants to understand road user behaviour prior to infrastructure changes
  • Vayu delivery bots hit the road
    August 9, 2024
    Company says that its robot does not need Lidar and will 'slash' delivery costs