Traffic engineers can use the latest advances in vision technology to streamline and enhance traffic management.     
     
The idea of using one camera to perform all functions at an intersection is attractive to authorities for many reasons and camera supplier 
     
Such technology has helped the authorities in the City of Greenwich, Connecticut, which was experiencing increasing difficulty dealing with the directional detection offered through traditional traffic cameras, as well as shadow and positioning issues. The solution came in the form of Gridsmart’s Bell Camera which protects the downward facing optics from the elements. 
     
According to Sean Turpin, Town of Greenwich, the solution was easy to install and has provided reliable detection in all weather conditions, and the volume data is now also being archived for future timing upgrades. 
 
Across in Allentown, Pennsylvania, the opening of a new hockey and entertainment complex left the local authority needing to manage an influx of visitors to the downtown area without a central traffic management system and traffic signals with minimal communication. To address the situation Gridsmart’s units were deployed at 36 intersections to gather traffic data to adjust signal timing and traffic flow strategies as well as providing real-time remote monitoring and visual assessment.
 Vision processing techniques do not necessarily depend on visible light  as infrared, scanning radar and thermal images can also be interpreted  computer algorithms.  A prime example is 
     
The  installation forms part of the authority’s efforts to make Liverpool’s  streets safer for cyclists and it has already installed thermal traffic  sensors on two busy intersections. It is creating a network of safe  cycle routes and had developed a scheme for Leeds Street, which links  directly to Pall Mall and the waterfront. 
     
“In  the previous traffic layout, cyclists effectively had to cross six  lanes at the same time as the traffic,” says James Leeming, senior  project manager at Liverpool City Council. “For some cyclists there was  not enough time,” he said, adding; “Not to mention how dangerous it can  be when big vehicles and cyclists cross the street together in a crowded  traffic situation at pinch points.”
 
Encompassed  in the new scheme is road resurfacing,  bespoke traffic signals, LED  street lighting, public realm  regeneration, cycle and pedestrian  facilities and capacity  improvements. The new traffic signals display a  green bicycle which  allows cyclists a five-second head start before the  main signal turns  green to release the other traffic. 
     
However  as Leeds  Street is a major route, the authority did not want to  incorporate an  additional ‘cycle’ stage permanently into the signal  sequencing because  this would increase waiting times for both cyclists  and vehicles.  Instead it specified a demand-based head start for  cyclists which was  achieved by using ThermiCam sensors to detect and  distinguish cyclists  from other vehicles. These use the thermal energy  (rather than light) to  detect vehicles and cyclists and not only at the  stop line, but also  some distance from the stop line regardless of  weather and lighting  conditions.
     
Now  Vauxhall  Road and Pall Mall have one ThermiCam unit on both sides of  Leeds  Street. Once the sensor detects a cyclist it transmits the  information  to the traffic light controller to trigger the traffic  signal to take  into account the cycle presence before the stage change  point. 
     
“This  way we can  reduce the number of cyclists arriving at the stop line just  after the  stage change decision and missing out on the cycle stage,”  said  Leeming. The implementation has reduced vehicle idling time while   improving both traffic flow and the safety and mobility of cyclists.
    
        
        



