Skip to main content

Eberle Design moves

Eberle Design Incorporated (EDI) has announced the relocation of its corporate headquarters and manufacturing facility to a new 30,000 sq ft premises at 3510 East Atlanta Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona. Telephone and fax numbers will remain the same. The company is recognised as a developer and manufacturer of component products designed to enhance and augment traffic control systems.
March 23, 2012 Read time: 1 min
41 Eberle Design Incorporated (EDI) has announced the relocation of its corporate headquarters and manufacturing facility to a new 30,000 sq ft premises at 3510 East Atlanta Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona. Telephone and fax numbers will remain the same.

The company is recognised as a developer and manufacturer of component products designed to enhance and augment traffic control systems. The EDI array of products including signal monitors, vehicle detectors, power supplies, flashers, load switches, and other vital infrastructure devices enables transportation professionals to integrate, automate, and manage traffic highways and intersections easily, efficiently and safely.

“Eberle Design has outgrown their two facilities and has long anticipated operating from a single consolidated building,” said said Bill Russell, president and CEO of EDI. “At last we are completely moved into our new manufacturing and office building and looking forward to the opportunities this new facility brings to us.”

Related Content

  • Data exploits parking potential
    March 11, 2015
    David Crawford parallel parks with innovations in two continents. Surveys of US cities indicate that drivers searching for parking can account for up to 37% of all urban traffic congestion. A 2011 study by IBM of 20 cities around the world found that nearly six out of ten drivers had abandoned their search for a parking space at least once; while motorists generally spent on average 20 minutes looking for a sought-after spot.
  • Columbia goes intermodal to support sustainability
    April 10, 2014
    David Crawford on the ups and downs of a Latin metropolis. Medellín, Colombia’s second city and a recognised leader in sustainable transport thinking, is rapidly extending its substantial existing investment in modern mobility. It is deploying both an enhanced integrated traffic management array and the country’s first intermodal public transportation management system. The supplier of both, under separate €9 million (US$12.3 million) contracts, is Spanish engineering company Indra, a major exporter
  • HDR predicts an adaptable and flexible future for roadways
    December 19, 2016
    HDR consultants, Brian Swindell and Bernie Arseanea, consider managed lanes’ untapped potential. It is no surprise that corridor planning continues to challenge agencies and owners as demand continues to surpass roadway capacity.
  • Connected offers free I2V connectivity
    November 1, 2016
    A new system could reduce the cost of implementing I2V communications across a city to less than that for a single intersection, as Colin Sowman hears. It may seem too good to be true but US company Connected Signals is offering city authorities the equipment to provide infrastructure to vehicle (I2V) communications for free. The system enables drivers to receive information about the timing of signals they are approaching via the EnLighten smartphone app (or connected in-vehicle display).