Skip to main content

Inrix launches traffic data analysis via the cloud

Inrix’s new portfolio of road performance and analytical visualisation tools, called Inrix Roadway Analytics, is a set of on-demand tools that provide transport agencies in Europe and the Middle East with quick and easy access to in-depth roadway analysis and visualisations. It also allows users to create reports and other communication materials to convey important information and recommendations to drivers, decision makers and the general public.
September 16, 2016 Read time: 1 min

163 Inrix’s new portfolio of road performance and analytical visualisation tools, called Inrix Roadway Analytics, is a set of on-demand tools that provide transport agencies in Europe and the Middle East with quick and easy access to in-depth roadway analysis and visualisations. It also allows users to create reports and other communication materials to convey important information and recommendations to drivers, decision makers and the general public.

Built on Inrix XD Traffic, which covers 1.7 million miles of road in 28 European and Middle East  countries, Inrix Roadway Analytics allows agencies to perform before and after studies to quantify and communicate the impact of a road improvement or events. In addition, the browser-based application can monitor and identify performance trends on key roads or segments; produce congestion reduction, travel time and emergency response KPIs; and monitor and compare roadway conditions at roadwork and construction sites and make adjustments minimise their impact.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Getting more for less from traffic data
    August 15, 2012
    Collection of traffic and transit data has grown significantly, combining with advances in connectivity and computational modelling to good effect. Desire to do more with less – to make budgets go further – has helped create a boom in the collection and study of traffic and transport data. Studies are becoming longer, greater in number and further in-depth as more intelligence is sought, plus, transportation agencies are looking to make processes of data collection less costly, or more efficient.
  • Countering congestion’s cost
    May 6, 2015
    A new report on the economic costs of traffic congestion predicts the problem will worsen significantly in future. Jon Masters reviews the figures and some suggested solutions. New figures on the rising economic and environmental costs of congestion have been published by the US traffic data specialist Inrix and the UK’s Centre for Economics & Business Research (Cebr). Their report finds the problem much bigger than previously thought.
  • Airbiquity adds Inrix and Parkopedia to its connected car content
    August 22, 2014
    US-based connected car services supplier, Airbiquity is to integrate two industry-leading geo-aware content providers into its Choreo connected car services delivery platform, making Inrix’s traffic information and driver services and the parking information services of Parkopedia available to Airbiquity’s automotive OEM customers deploying the its Driver Experience infotainment service. Leveraging the Airbiquity content portfolio, automotive OEMs can now easily configure both INRIX traffic and Parkopedia p
  • Real time active traffic management improves travel times
    July 17, 2012
    Traffic management centres (TMC) have traditionally served to provide surveillance and responses to traffic incidents and recurring and non-recurring changes in road networks. Typically, a TMC collected field data from the roadway and transit infrastructure and provided the integration necessary for operators to see what was happening and then coordinate a response. Standard operating procedures (SOPs) guided operators on how to respond to a given situation. It eventually became impractical for TMC operat