ASFINAG has developed a mobile traffic monitoring and guidance system through a pre-commercial procurement project. 
     
Drivers have become accustomed to roadside and gantry-mounted traffic guidance and control systems along the major roads and main motorway sections. But there are occasions when intense monitoring is required on a temporary basis along motorway sections without traffic guidance and control systems and on federal and national roads too. Examples include the monitoring of the traffic flow during road works or at big events.
     
To cater for these temporary events the Autobahnen- und Schnellstraßen-Finanzierungs-Aktiengesellschaft (
     
In order to identify a solution, ASFINAG conducted a pre-commercial procurement (PCP) project in cooperation with the Austrian Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology.
     
An essential element of the PCP project is for multiple competing companies to develop different, innovative solutions to the given problem. The process has multiple consecutive phases starting with the call for proposals followed by feasibility studies and then prototype development. At the end of each phase there is a selection / reduction of bidders remaining in the competition.
In this case seven project proposals were submitted in the first phase, out of which five were chosen for a feasibility study.  Of these five consortiums, two (‘Move Best’ and ‘Movebag’) were selected to develop a prototype for testing on ASFINAG’s network.
Move Best has been developed by EBE Solutions, the  Austrian Institute  of Technology and Verkehrspuls – Technisches Büro für  Verkehrsplanung,  while Prisma solutions, 
      
Both  prototypes include a combination of mobile, energy-efficient and  dynamically controllable components for the collection, transmission and  display of traffic data. Two people can easily erect the mobile sensors  (radar, Bluetooth and CCTV) on-site to collect information such as  vehicle numbers, speed and passing times as well as video imaging.
     
With  both contenders, the mobile traffic management system sends the raw  data to either the existing permanent or a temporary traffic control  centre for interpretation and analyses using a number of defined  algorithms. All data is available online and can be viewed as a map in  the control centre. Based on the traffic situation, the operator can  remotely configure the information on the mobile display boards to  inform road users about the current traffic situation and possible  alternative routes.
     
Both systems have a modular  concept and can be transported in sections using an ASFINAG service  vehicle. Once deployed the battery-powered systems can operate for up to  a week without recharging. 
     
When  a bigger traffic disruption or obstruction is planned or reported, the  operation team dispatch the system to the relevant locations to set up  the mobile display boards and erect the sensors. The precise location is  decided by the responsible employee on-site according to the  configuration of the road and any obstacles such as roadworks.
     
Once  in operation the real-time data collected by the sensors, including the  exact location of all units, is transmitted to the central system via  GSM (global system for mobile communications) or UTMS (universal mobile  telecommunications system).
The first test results  were very positive and further trials in live operation are being  assessed. The highlight of the tests was the deployment of the mobile  traffic management system on the roads leading to the Red Bull Ring  during the 2015 Formula 1 Grand Prix in Austria. Based on the results,  the procurement of two additional systems is envisaged. 
     
The  phased realisation of the pilot project guaranteed the systems exactly  met the requirements while allowing both competition and quality  assurance, and minimising project risks. 
    
        
        
        



