Skip to main content

Yunex and Lyt give green light to emergency response in Seattle

NextGen preemption solution will help to create green waves for vehicles going to incidents
By Adam Hill July 13, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Making emergency response safer in Seattle (© Bandit | Dreamstime.com)

Yunex Traffic and Lyt are to help first responders get more safely and quickly to incidents in a deal with the City of Seattle Department of Transportation (SDoT) and the University of Washington (UW). 

The firms announced their partnership in the US Pacific Northwest earlier this year. In this contract they will deploy Lyt’s NextGen emergency vehicle preemption solutions with Yunex's traffic management system for 32 signal intersections - rising to a total of 50 - throughout the UW campus.
 
The aim is to improve emergency vehicle travel time to the two ERs in the area by implementing a 'green wave', enabling traffic signals to adjust, based on real-time congestion, to clear traffic in advance of approaching first responders.

It will rely on communications between the Seattle Fire Department (SFD) CAD/AVL system and the SDoT central ITS software suite, with vehicles talking directly to networked traffic signals through the Lyt.speed cloud platform. 

Rodney Mathis, CEO of Yunex Traffic US, says: “Our combined technologies will make a significant impact on the lives of residents and commuters throughout Seattle and the University region.” 
 
NextGen "drastically makes intersections safer for everyone, and it improves the response time for emergency first responders", said Tim Menard, CEO and founder of Lyt. 

The deployment is part of an approved grant for the multimodal Integrated Corridor Mobility for All (MICMA) project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Uber to enter Seattle’s bike-share space
    June 22, 2018
    Uber intends to launch its newly-acquired Jump electric bikes in Seattle, US, in a move which could increase competition among rival firms. The ride-hailing company will decide on whether to apply for a permit once regulations have been mapped out by the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDoT). SDoT is finalising a permit programme for bike-share operators and plans to present a proposal to the city council next month. A report by the Seattle Times says three bike-share companies operate in the city
  • AI: a means to an end
    October 12, 2022
    Artificial intelligence is a powerful tool to create a balance between safety, resilience, sustainability and inclusivity when it comes to connected and automated driving, says Margriet van Schijndel of TU/e
  • Oxbotica raises $140m for AV software
    January 16, 2023
    Funding will be used to grow in North America and to pursue driverless passenger transport
  • Swiftmile e-scooter hubs arrive in Miami 
    June 24, 2021
    Swiftmile says it hopes to roll out 100 charging hubs for 800 vehicles by end of 2022