On the Pan-American Highway, the lengthy series of roads which spans both American continents - from the US state of Alaska to the Latin American country of Argentina - ITS solutions are many and varied. One of these, in Peru’s capital, has helped to smooth out a notorious pinchpoint - going underground to solve the problem.
The Benavides Tunnel in the Lima metropolitan area is now said to be the most modern piece of road infrastructure in Peru. Situated beneath the Panamericana Sur (or southern Pan-American Highway), the tunnel is 580m long and stands to benefit more than one million residents of the districts of Surco, San Juan de Miraflores, Villa María del Triunfo and Villa El Salvador. It helps to smooth the passage of 15,000 vehicles every day around Lima.
Huge delays
Previously, the Santa María bridge was the exit route from the Panamericana Sur to Avenue Salvador Allende, which links Villa El Salvador and Villa María del Triunfo. For commuters, crossing the bridge generated huge delays and congestion due to intersections with other roads and the traffic light chaos which ensued, especially at rush hour.
Now drivers can connect directly to the Panamericana Sur through the tunnel, and with the installation of an ITS solution, it is - as well as being the longest tunnel in the Lima region – considered both the most modern, and the safest, in Peru. A minimum free height of 5.25m rises up to 6.25m at the highest point, and there is a horizontal free width of 9m – which is enough for two lanes to allow the easy flow of vehicles, plus sidewalks.
Just building the tunnel to ease congestion was obviously not enough: different studies pointed out that to avoid creating new problems it was essential to comply with road safety requirements. Given the high volume of traffic through the tunnel, it was vital that any ITS solution would allow permanent monitoring of what is happening underground, with automatic detection of critical faults, fires, control of lighting, notifications to users through panels and loudspeakers, access control to the tunnel, and so on.
For this reason the transportation authorities of the city of Lima opted for Spanish company
 
 
Incident detection
 
The  new security system allows detection of any incident on the road, the  company says, which means it can be solved quickly. This same flow of  information also means the exact daily, weekly and monthly patterns of  vehicles that pass through this section of the road can be established,  along with other data such as what type of vehicle they are.
 
This  is very important to ensure the information given to drivers on  variable messaging panels - with the aim of preventing traffic snarl-ups  during critical hours – is as accurate as possible. So far, the 100 SOS  posts installed in the tunnel have also fulfilled their function in  many cases - in the event of accidents or mechanical problems to the  vehicles - allowing motorists in difficulty to ask for quick evacuation  and therefore avoid queues building up behind stricken vehicles.
 
“In  this sense, the ITS improves traffic, because it minimises the negative  effect of incidents,” said Agustín Ferrer, Tecsidel’s project manager.
 
The  supervision of the system is composed of the following modules:  management of control equipment, alarm management, supervision and video  surveillance of the tunnel, incident/accident and maintenance parts  management, management of rules associated with alarms and management of  action plans.
 
 
Security  cameras are  connected with the networks of Peru’s national police,  which ensures  permanent surveillance - both to prevent and intervene in  case of  traffic accidents.
 
 
Back-up devices
 
Regarding   the lighting systems inside the tunnel, back-up devices were installed   as insurance in case of emergency and evacuation. The type of devices   included those for fire protection, automatic detection and extinction,   traffic management equipment, security installations, monitoring and   control of emergency power via CCTV cameras, DAI, public address system,   signalling, control of lighting, environmental sensors, fibre optic   communications network and redundant VLANs in addition to complementary   infrastructure such as access control and radio.
 
The   monitoring centre has a view of all the elements and works with web   technology in real time, automating the process of data acquisition,   screen representation and incident management, whether these are   reported by the tunnel team or by highway concessionaire staff.
 
 
•    Presentation layer includes the full view of the tunnel, indicating   the  position of equipment through icons, animations and color codes   that  express their status in real time.
 
•    Logical layer - the core of the system - consists of a series of    applications and processes that are responsible for the processing of    data obtained by peripheral systems. It is also responsible for    generating reports from the generated database.
 
• Access layer to the devices, which includes the necessary implementation of the communication protocols with those devices.
 
At    the same time, the system contemplates the exchange of information   with  systems external to the ITS, such as the toll system and   maintenance  management in general.
 
The    exchange of information with external systems to the motorway    concessionaire - as the government entity that requires traffic data to    be sent periodically - generates important information flow which   allows  other road infrastructure works to be programmed and implemented   in the  short and medium term. 
    
        
        



