Skip to main content

StreetLight introduces Traffic Monitor

New tool can instantly pinpoint and visualise disruptions on traffic networks
By Adam Hill August 1, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The delayed start to the Copa America Final in Miami created traffic issues

StreetLight Data, has introduced a real-time traffic disruption assessment product called Traffic Monitor.

The Jacobs subsidiary says it can instantly pinpoint and visualise disruptions - for example, with major sports events or climate-related problems on the network - as well as "their ripple effects throughout the network".

Laura Schewel, StreetLight CEO and VP of transportation software at Jacobs, says: "Customers can not only utilise comprehensive mobility information to manage and build infrastructure, they can also better operate that infrastructure in real-time, even in tough situations, all without ever installing physical sensors."

She adds: "Traffic is becoming more irregular – and traffic professionals have to cope with bigger disruptions ranging from storms to major events like the Copa America Final and World Cup.” 

Customers can view recent and ongoing traffic disruptions to understand the severity and duration, allowing rapid response, StreetLight says. This can include adjusting messaging to road users.

As it also shows the performance of traffic over time, Traffic Monitor also means it can help determine whether a certain event’s traffic was managed successfully, and can point to areas for improvement in the future.

Features include:

•    Daily route-based travel times
o    Improve detour planning by measuring travel times and observing routes that drivers take during unusual situations


•    Daily network-wide timeline view
o    Respond to residents with data-driven insights about actual conditions in disrupted locations


•    Daily average speeds
o    Show when speeds fall well below typical, enabling proactive identification and addressing of speeding hotspots in the disruption location to ensure safety


•    Real-time speeds and incidents
o    Dynamically adjust traffic assessment controls with Active Traffic Management

 

•    Historical volume & speed
o    Highlight times when volumes exceed threshold for lane closure, speeding up project completion with seasonally adjusted, optimised road and lane closure window

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cooperative systems and privacy not mutually exclusive
    February 6, 2012
    Are co-operative systems and personal privacy mutually exclusive? Not necessarily, says Neil Hoose. But the more advanced the application, the greater the concession of privacy may have to become
  • Gewi’s traffic information solutions give the bigger picture
    June 13, 2016
    There are demonstrations of Gewi’s traffic information centre (TIC) solutions on its booth including those for road incident management (RIM) and work zones. The RIM features allow organisations to efficiently manage incidents on the roadway or with roadway infrastructure in a consistent manner while the TIC system can define and track predefined incident response plans to provide operators with a step-by-step response process. It also tracks each action
  • Inrix aids authorities in dealing with data
    August 18, 2015
    New traffic data products and services have been launched to aid transport and urban planners and business with detailed intelligence on journey patterns, reports Jon Masters. Manual travel surveys ought soon to become a thing of the past for transport planners and the business community. The technology now exists for getting sophisticated levels of traffic and trip data from connected vehicles. Cars and commercial fleets carrying a GPS device, or a mobile phone or smartphone are the sources of the informat
  • When traffic data can get it totally wrong
    November 30, 2021
    How can a highway devoid of traffic provide data suggesting it is filled with vehicles crawling along? Michael Vardi of Valerann provides an insight into how data can easily be skewed - and what can be done to prevent it