Skip to main content

Reducing Los Angeles’ traffic woes

According to city engineers in Los Angeles, they have achieved a major milestone in their efforts to ease traffic congestion in the city; every one of its nearly 4,400 signalised intersections is now monitored and synchronised for more efficient traffic flow. Loop detectors installed under the road surface monitor traffic, providing speed, traffic volume and queue data, while more than 400 cameras each monitor up to twenty intersections, all coordinated by the city’s Automated Traffic Surveillance and Contr
March 20, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
According to city engineers in Los Angeles, they have achieved a major milestone in their efforts to ease traffic congestion in the city; every one of its nearly 4,400 signalised intersections is now monitored and synchronised for more efficient traffic flow.

Loop detectors installed under the road surface monitor traffic, providing speed, traffic volume and queue data, while more than 400 cameras each monitor up to twenty intersections, all coordinated by the city’s Automated Traffic Surveillance and Control System (ATSAC).  ATSAC’s team of traffic engineers monitor more than a dozen screens showing live video feeds and animated graphics for every signalised intersection in the city.

Based on data from the loop detectors, a proprietary algorithm developed by ATSAC determines demand on a given intersection. Then, based on time of day or scheduled events, it can modify a signal's timing in order to move traffic along.

A system this complex and adaptive is quietly undermining the city's reputation for terrible traffic, but engineer Edward Yu, who oversees ATSAC, there's always something to improve.

"The city's always growing, it's always developing. We're looking at ways to improve our existing system, upgrading our system, expanding it, using our data to give more motorists information. It'll be a matter of time before we develop the next big thing."

Related Content

  • ITS annual meeting - how transportation affects social issues
    August 2, 2012
    The 2010 ITS America Annual Meeting & Exposition, which will take place in Houston, Texas will offer attendees something of a contrast with the policy-driven event which took place in Washington, DC this year. Houston will go to the other end of the scale and focus on real-life technology applications and operational best practice, says event Co-Chair David Sparks
  • Joi Dean: "I believe that we can always figure out a solution to things"
    December 11, 2023
    Joi Dean, CEO of the Richmond Metropolitan Transportation Authority, has been appointed second vice president of IBTTA for 2024. Adam Hill finds out about what drives her to leave a legacy
  • Complementing traditional ITS with new technologies
    April 11, 2013
    For a long time, the ITS industry agonised over how to make itself better known to the public. There were pragmatic reasons for this – greater awareness of what it is and does leads to greater lobbying power, an important consideration for a small industry pitched against the might of the road-building fraternity in the fight for budgets – but there was also an element, it must be said, of just wanting to be ‘loved’. But that desire runs up against several realities. The first is that even ‘experts’ strugg
  • Technology holds the key to painless parking
    March 21, 2014
    Parking has been the most innovative of all the transportation sectors in the past five years. Richard Harris, Solution Director, Xerox Services outlines some of the key drivers and trends