Skip to main content

StreetLight Data offers intersection metrics 

Company says planners can improve congestion and save endless hours of data collection
By Ben Spencer September 23, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
StreetLight TMC features include an estimated volume counts with 15-minute granularity (© Ryan Deberardinis | Dreamstime.com)

StreeLight Data has unveiled metrics that allow transportation engineers and planners to compile a turning movement count (TMC) for nearly every intersection across the US and Canada. 

StreeLight says Covid-19 protocols have challenged traditional traffic count methods in the last year and a half. 

The new TMC Metrics will significantly affect traffic impact analyses, corridor studies and signal optimisation, the company adds. 

According to StreetLight, the results save endless hours of data collection and skip the sample-size challenges of manually collected 48-hour counts while keeping workers safe.

The metrics are delivered on-demand, in exportable tables and intersection diagrams without time-consuming post-processing.

StreeLight co-founder Laura Schewel says: “With our TMC Metrics, we’ve added another efficient tool to help planners and engineers understand today’s dynamic local traffic landscape. Teams can spend their valuable time improving congestion instead of manually compiling results.”

TMC features include an estimated volume counts with 15-minute granularity for any time of day or week, quick intersection selection with the new easy zone set-up and a new intersection diagram and TMC table featuring the peak hour factor. 

The metrics can be used to measure peak am /pm hours for traffic impact analyses and capacity analyses, determine intersection traffic activity for safety planning and to get intersection traffic counts as an input for dynamic traffic assignment or microsimulation.


 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Keeping a watching brief over traffic flows
    March 11, 2015
    Monitoring traffic flows is set to become an even bigger challengebut a revolution in camera technology can help, as Patrik Anderson explains. By 2025 almost 60% of the world’s population will live in urban areas and in those cities there will be an estimated 6.2 billion private motorised trips every day. In order to manage this level of traffic growth, traffic management centres (TMCs) will need to both increase their monitoring capabilities and be able to detect traffic problems quickly, efficiently and r
  • Conduent brings contactless payments to Italy
    August 11, 2021
    Conduent says ticket is not stored on a device or other media, but in the cloud
  • Derq joins Qualcomm smart cities programme 
    August 26, 2021
    Qualcomm programme connects cities and gov agencies with providers offering smart city solutions
  • Smart Spanish city trials cell-based traffic management
    November 7, 2013
    David Crawford reports on an urban electronic nervous system. The northern Spanish city of Santander – historically a port - is now an emerging technology showcase attracting global attention as a prototype for a medium-sized smart city of the future. In a move to determine the optimal use of available data, it is creating a de-facto experimental laboratory for sensor and mobile phone-based urban traffic management and environmental monitoring innovations.