Skip to main content

Waze adds Applied auto alerts

School beacons, emergency vehicles & faulty traffic signals automatically post notifications
By Adam Hill January 23, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
School Waze (© Alison Calazans | Dreamstime.com)

The Waze driving navigation app now includes warning messages from infrastructure and vehicles equipped with Applied Information's TravelSafely technology.

Waze Applied
Driving school

The Waze for Cities programme enables local transportation agencies with Applied tech to provide these additional free, automatic safety alerts.

This means enabled school beacons, emergency vehicles at the scene of an incident, and malfunctioning traffic signals will automatically post alerts and warnings on the Waze map without human intervention.

“Leveraging our TravelSafely technology to provide Waze users with this important safety information is another tool transportation agencies have at their disposal to make their communities safer,” said Bryan Mulligan, Applied Information president.

“These notifications will help Wazers be more aware of vulnerable road users, first responders working along the highways and of malfunctioning traffic signals ahead.”

For example, the school beacon notification uses the Waze hazard alert to let drivers know that an active school zone is ahead and that they should slow down.

Emergency vehicles at the scene of an incident let drivers know there is an accident and that first responders are ahead.

The idea is this will slow vehicles driving past the emergency personnel and prevent secondary crashes in the queue.

The traffic signal notifications indicate that a particular signal is malfunctioning, allowing users to avoid the signal, know to look for flashing lights or treat it as a four-way stop if the lights are out.

Government agencies can sign up for Waze for Cities here

The Applied Information data sharing programme is free to local transportation agencies with equipped infrastructure and vehicles.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Sharing data creates value - IRF Geneva
    December 21, 2021
    A report on the sharing of data to improve mobility has come up with a policy framework for the industry. Susanna Zammataro, director general of the International Road Federation in Geneva, explains to Adam Hill why this can empower companies and organisations
  • Siemens Mobility is clearing the air
    October 2, 2020
    Tens of thousands of premature deaths in the UK alone are linked to air quality - but it doesn’t have to be that way. Siemens Mobility’s Wilke Reints explains why
  • EIT Mobility’s A-Z of Uvar
    January 31, 2023
    Well-implemented vehicle mobility schemes offer cities quick ways to improve the quality of urban life - and now EIT Mobility has written a guide to doing so. Andrew Stone has a read…
  • Signal prioritisation as silver bullet
    January 13, 2023
    We can’t keep building roads to solve congestion. But help is available: transit signal prioritisation can easily reduce traffic and bring back riders to mass transit, says Bobby Lee of Lyt