Skip to main content

US DoT awards $43m mobility tech grants to states

FHWA programme is aimed at innovative technologies to improve road safety
By Adam Hill June 18, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
US states' road technology projects have received a $43.3m boost (© Katarinanh | Dreamstime.com)

The US Department of Transportation (DoT)’s Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) has splashed out millions of dollars to 10 states developing ‘innovative technologies’.

The Advanced Transportation and Congestion Management Technologies Deployment (ATCMTD) grants total $43.3 million and have been given to projects “using cutting-edge technologies that will improve mobility and safety for America’s travellers”.

Established under the Fixing America's Surface Transportation (Fast) Act, the grants are open to entities including state DoTs, local governments, transit agencies, metropolitan planning organisations.

The FHWA evaluated 33 applications, requesting more than $139 million.

Projects chosen range from advanced real-time traveller information and vehicle communications to artificial intelligence and bicycle-pedestrian safety - and the idea is that they could serve as national models.

The approved ATCMTD grants list is:

Florida DoT    I-4 Florida’s Regional Advanced Mobility Elements (FRAME)    $10,071,600

Hawaii DoT    Implementing Cellular V2X Technology to Improve Safety and ITS Management in Hawaii    $6,855,000

Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG)    Deployment of Personalised and Dynamic Travel Demand Management Technology in the Washington, DC / Baltimore, MD / Richmond, VA mega-region    $2,970,000

Michigan DoT    Intelligent Woodward Corridor Project    $5,500,000

Missouri DoT    I-270 Predictive Layered Operation Initiative (PLOI)    $1,000,000

North Carolina DoT    NCDoT Multimodal Connected Vehicle Pilot    $2,117,750

Ohio DoT/DriveOhio    I-70 Truck Automation Corridor    $4,400,000

Tennessee DoT    Artificial Intelligence-Powered Decision Support Tools for Integrated Corridor Management    $2,617,653

Virginia DoT    AI Meets ICM: Realising the Next Generation of Regional Mobility    $4,355,000

Washington DoT    Deployment of the Washington State Virtual Coordination Center (VCC) for Multimodal Integrated Corridor Management    $3,424,361
          
Total: $43,311,364

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS America unveils future ITS roadmap
    February 9, 2017
    The Intelligent Transportation Society of America (ITS America) has released its public policy roadmap, The Road Ahead: The Next Generation of Mobility, providing policy recommendations on how to advance the research and deployment of transformational and intelligent transportation technologies. In particular, the roadmap provides recommendations on the policy issues shaping the next generation of transportation driven by robotics, automation, artificial intelligence, wireless communications and cloud co
  • Green Light WIM
    July 30, 2012
    Beginning in the 1990s, Oregon was one of the first US states to use weigh-in-motion scales and transponder-based systems to enable trucks to avoid having to stop at weigh stations. Its Green Light preclearance system soon became a model for similar deployments throughout the country. Today, Green Light annually weighs and screens 1.6 million trucks as they approach 21 Oregon weigh stations and it preclears 1.5 million of them.
  • Intertraffic Mexico 2022: safety & sustainability
    November 8, 2022
    Sixth edition runs from 8-10 November at the Citibanamex Center in Mexico City
  • Ann Arbor opts for Yutraffic Fusion
    April 29, 2025
    System can prioritise vulnerable road users, reducing potential conflict points