Skip to main content

Virginia Beach traffic planning centre opens

A joint venture between Dominion University and Virginia Beach city planners, the Centre for Innovative Transportation Solutions, will soon be shaping the city’s transportation future using computer simulations. City planners envision that the centre can help answer all sorts of questions, including the best place to add lanes or build a new road, what the traffic from a sports arena would look like, or what contingencies are needed to prepare for an accident or natural disaster that shuts down a key road.
November 5, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A joint venture between Dominion University and Virginia Beach city planners, the Centre for Innovative Transportation Solutions, will soon be shaping the city’s transportation future using computer simulations.

City planners envision that the centre can help answer all sorts of questions, including the best place to add lanes or build a new road, what the traffic from a sports arena would look like, or what contingencies are needed to prepare for an accident or natural disaster that shuts down a key road.

The simulations will be far more detailed than the regional model now available to planners in Hampton Roads, said Mark Schnaufer, the city's transportation planning coordinator.

Bob Gey, the city's traffic engineer, described the difference this way: “Think of a model that basically tells you how many cars can go down a street. Now think of a simulation that breaks down the traffic counts into individual vehicles and then incorporates those "predictable unpredictables" - breakdowns and accidents - that Gey said cause half of all delays.”

The centre will not be limited to Virginia Beach-specific work, however. Mayor Will Sessoms said Thursday that the centre will partake in "unbiased, nonpartisan and scientific endeavours."

City officials anticipate using the centre to help them develop their long-range transportation plan. One of the first tasks will be to create a base model of Virginia Beach's freeways and other major roads, including intersections with traffic lights, said Mecit Cetin, an associate professor at the centre.

Such a detailed working model of a city's transportation network has been done only in a few places in the country, Cetin said.

Related Content

  • Trafficware: Digitised transport tech ‘is the new asphalt’
    April 16, 2019

    Trafficware provides the tech to manage intersections all over the world. Colin Sowman asks CEO Jon Newhard about the ‘questions behind the questions’

    Last year, Trafficware CEO Jon Newhard negotiated the company’s acquisition by Cubic Corporation and now serves as general manager of Trafficware within Cubic’s Transportation Systems business unit.

  • App informs drivers of delays during Long Beach bridge replacement
    June 6, 2014
    David Crawford previews a work zone travel breakthrough. In February 2014, the Port of Long Beach in California launched what it claims is a groundbreaking construction zone navigation aid - LB Bridge mobile app. The app is designed to help drivers during the Gerald Desmond Bridge replacement programme by keeping them up to date on activity and the ensuing traffic diversions when construction starts in summer 2014. The unusually content-rich app is designed to convey current project news (enlivened by phot
  • Transport can build legacy of hope
    November 30, 2020
    Racial and social injustice has come to the fore this year. Samuel Johnson, IBTTA president and Transportation Corridor Agencies CEO, explains what the industry can do to build ‘a legacy of hope and progress’
  • Destiny Thomas on transit's racist legacy
    September 25, 2020
    The killing of George Floyd by US police sparked international protests and put Black Lives Matter into the spotlight. Dr Destiny Thomas, founder and CEO of Thrivance Group, talks to Adam Hill about the legacy of racism in transit, Covid-19, slow streets – and what comes next