 
     Returning travel times to normal within two hours of the end of a major football game was the challenge facing College Station, Adam Lyons explains how this was achieved.    
     
College Station, TX, also known as ‘Aggieland’, is located right in the middle of the Dallas/Fort Worth, San Antonio and Houston triangle making the city accessible to over 14 million Texans within less than a four-hour drive. One of the biggest draws to this area is Texas A&M University (TAMU) and the Aggie football games in the fall, meaning there are thousands of vehicles coming in and out of College Station before and after the football games. Aggie fans have a spirit all their own but nothing puts a damper on game day faster than sitting in hours of traffic either arriving or departing the game.
     
It had already been taking well over two hours to move the 70,000-85,000 fans after a football game ended - but the popularity of the Aggie football games meant the seating capacity of the Kyle Field ground has been increased to more than 100,000. Texas A&M and the City asked for a two hours target to move a significantly larger number of fans after the football game.  
     
For the past number of years, the City of College Station’s Public Works Department had been working with the university to try and solve this congestion problem.  A few years ago the Texas A&M Transportation Institute created a mobile phone app, ‘Destination Aggieland’, to help identify the best entry and exit routes before and after the games and convenient parking locations. Traffic Operations staff placed police and traffic personnel on the streets to help move traffic throughout the streets and away from the stadium, but with the rapid growth of the city, the University and the stadium capacity, it was past time for a new solution.  
     
A multiphase, multimillion dollar project was initiated to modernise its traffic management system and update the city’s ITS capabilities, with one of its goals being the improvement of post-game traffic flow. City officials realised they needed help to make informed decisions to more effectively manage the traffic, not only on game days but also on a day-to-day basis.  With the support of the City Council, the City’s Information Technology, Facilities, and Public Works departments, a complete multiyear ITS Master Plan was developed, and 
 
The first step was to overhaul the communication  system from an outdated serial network to an Ethernet IP system to  provide a fast, real-time connection to devices in the traffic  cabinets.  At nearly all of the intersections, this required the  replacement of legacy traffic controllers (77 in total) with IP-based  controllers, upgraded conflict monitors, additional Ethernet field  switches and broadband wireless radios. The added radios were utilised  to provide broadband connection to those intersections not within the  existing fibre network and ensure high-quality video and data could be  brought back to a central location. 
     
With the added communication systems  in place, the older signal software system was upgraded to provide IP  connectivity and dynamic signal timing changes.  So that Traffic  Operations could view what’s going on at the intersections in real-time,  twenty-five additional PTZ cameras and twenty-three new video detection  cameras were installed to enhance signal control and provide live video  back to a central location. 
 
One  other critical system was installed to help monitor performance: a  Bluetooth Travel Time system to collect real-time and historical travel  time data. This system helps traffic managers measure the roadways’  performance to determine if adjustments to signal timings are improving  traffic flow. 
     
With all the items outlined in the ITS Master Plan, the  Traffic Department was able to install most of the Year Two equipment  along with the Year One items in the first six months of the project -  and well under the budget.
     
The  last step in this project was to design and buildout a custom traffic  management centre (TMC) consisting of eight high-definition 46” video  monitors in a 4x2 configuration, three computer workstations, video  servers and networking equipment.  The complete enlarged TMC buildout,  utilising an existing room with one new outside wall and two new glass  walls, was completed in six days. 
 
Throughout  the six-month project there was a  non-movable date - the first TAMU  football home game of the season  scheduled for 12 September, 2015.  With  only two weeks on the schedule  for the field equipment installation,  and two weeks for the TMC  buildout, it was a rush to the finish line to  be ready for the 102,733  fans that would visit Kyle Field on that first  weekend of the season.
     
The   overall project was completed successfully and the goal of having   traffic return to a normal, uncongested period within 120 minutes of   game-end was met. Traffic Operations staff utilise each component of the   ITS system to meet that goal after every home game.  Because of the   high-speed IP connectivity throughout the city, and a new signal control   software, the system enables operators to adjust and evaluate traffic   signal timing in real-time to change and improve conditions for   travellers. 
     
In addition   to the normal traffic operations personnel, police representatives are   now present in the TMC during football games. 
     
   With radio communications available to on-street officers, and the   additional video cameras to view live traffic conditions, immediate   action can be taken to help move vehicles and pedestrians more   efficiently through the intersections after the game has completed. TMC   personnel can also ensure that the on-street barricades are removed   faster, implement post-game timing plans at the optimum time, and   respond to unplanned events such as crashes in a timely manner. 
     
These   fine tuning adjustments come on top of preprogrammed signal timings  for  before and after the game, non-game weekends and morning/evening  peak  hours.
 
 To better  determine  how the overall traffic  system is performing, the city’s  authorities  have just started  implementing the Utah DOT/Purdue  University Signal  Performance Metrics  program.  With the incredible  amount of data  available through these  metrics, and the installed  Bluetooth travel time  system, the city’s  traffic engineers can make  real-time adjustments and  immediately see  if changes have improved the  situation on the ground.  Through the use  of these performance  measurement systems further  fine-tuning changes  can be made to ensure  the performance of the system  is as high as  possible. 
     
The   system  has provided the traffic controllers with the ability to  monitor  and  respond to live traffic conditions that hadn’t existed  before.  In   prior seasons, adjustments to the plan were made at a  post-game debrief   meeting in preparation for the next football game.  Now Texas A&M  and  the city’s traffic personnel can discuss  problems, implement  solutions  and evaluate results in real-time.  
     
“We    can finally make signal timing or traffic control changes and use the    cameras to confirm that no negative impacts are occurring upstream or    downstream of the change,” said Troy Rother, city traffic engineer  for   the City of College Station.
 
Through the    partnership between the three agencies, the aim to return the city’s    streets to a normal level of traffic within 120 minutes after each    football game has been met and continues to be met.
     
Furthermore,    the Traffic Operations department is looking ahead at future    improvements which include more Bluetooth sensors, signal shop upgrades,    arterial dynamic message signs and additional signal control   upgrades.   With football games come heavy football traffic for such a   large  stadium and program.  Whether the Aggies win or lose, the City of    College Station has made incredible strides to enhance the efficiency   of  the traffic systems and improve travel for the diehard Aggie fans    returning home.
-  About the Author: Adam Lyons is director of marketing at Iteris.        
 
 
     
         
         
         
        



