Skip to main content

Miami-Dade launches mobility innovation 'playground'

Miami-Dade County in Florida and transportation platform CoMotion have launched what they call a 'playground' for urban mobility innovation.
By Adam Hill July 2, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Miami-Dade: new mobility 'playground' (© Studiobarcelona | Dreamstime.com)

CoMotion Lab Miami will bring together "an unprecedented consortium of international, national and regional public and private stakeholders whose goal is improving mobility and transit in Miami-Dade County and Southern Florida".

Announced at this week's CoMotion Miami Live, the idea is that it will attract ideas and technology to be tested locally, from which policy recommendations can be drawn in areas such as drones, smart infrastructure and public/private models in transit.

Founding members include Uber, Joby Aviation, Via and Inrix.

Mayor Carlos Gimenez said the initiative is "designed to make our county a vibrant living lab of new mobility in order to create new services for our residents and thus jobs and economic activity".

C-Lab is backed by the Miami-Dade Department of Transportation and Public Works, which will oversee pilot zones and administration of the tech tests and mobility initiatives.

Miami-Dade has 5,500 miles of public roads, as well as airspace and maritime channels, offering "a complex and variegated testing geography, representative of different kinds of urban geographies throughout the US and beyond: dense urban centre, exurban sprawl and developer-led communities".

Meanwhile the county has begun using the Inrix Road Rules cloud-based platform to aid the introduction of services such as ride-hailing, e-scooters and autonomous vehicles.

Using public data, it digitises local information such as ride-hailing locations, parking restrictions, speed limits, crosswalks and school zones, and makes this accessible via an open application programming interface.

"Having foundational city data made available through Inrix’s Road Rules platform is a key piece of supporting mobility innovation throughout the region,” said Alice N. Bravo, director of Miami-Dade DoT.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Speed limits: is 20 really plenty?
    June 16, 2020
    Speed kills – which means cutting speed should cut collisions. But is it that simple?
  • 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
  • The inside story of how traffic chaos was avoided after I-95 collapse
    August 23, 2023
    June’s collapse of major US roadway I-95 in Pennsylvania could have caused lengthy traffic chaos. But - relatively speaking at least - it didn’t and gridlock was avoided. Alan Dron finds out why
  • MaaS Market conference platform for pioneering projects
    August 21, 2017
    In opening the session on putting MaaS ideas into practice, Hans Arby, chief executive of UbiGo, told the conference that, “MaaS can mean different things to different people. This is why we decided to run MaaS under real conditions and launch the Gothenburg pilot scheme in 2013.” The trial involved 70 households paying €130/month for 6 months with participants agreeing that 20 cars could be put into storage. More than 12,000 bookings/transactions took place during the trial and there were no drop-outs. Ac