Skip to main content

Aecom and Iteris sign $13.2m Virginia agreement

Contract will see Iteris provide traffic services to Virginia Department of Transportation
By Adam Hill April 14, 2023 Read time: 1 min
Arlington, Virginia (© Jon Bilous | Dreamstime.com)

Iteris has signed a two-year, $13.2 million sub-contract agreement with Aecom for transport-related services across the US state of Virginia.

It will provide traffic and incident management support to Virginia Department of Transportation’s Traffic Operations Center (TOC) Services Program.

Covering all Virginia cities and counties, the work will include providing programme leadership, operations strategy, process and training development, and operations staffing - including regional operations management; TOC managers, supervisors, operators; district incident management coordinators; and freeway and signal engineers.

Virginia has five TOCs, monitoring road conditions, giving information to drivers, dispatching incident responders and coordinating traffic information and signals.

The deal is an extension to an existing five-year base contract, this deal demonstrates VDOT’s ongoing success with and continued trust in Iteris’ mobility consulting services offering.
 

Related Content

  • December 8, 2022
    Iteris stands firm in face of Texas disaster
    Company's vision expertise will be utilised in Fort Bend County emergency planning
  • August 19, 2014
    Iteris’ gets Orange County in sync
    David Crawford welcomes progress in cross-boundary coordination Iteris’ US$1.4 million contract for traffic signal synchronisation on Newport Boulevard, California is evidence of an acceleration of activity by the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA) in coordinated traffic management. It also continues the US traffic management specialist’s established technical relationship with the area’s prime transportation agency.
  • January 23, 2012
    Hard shoulder running aids uniform traffic flow and safer driving
    David Crawford detects a market for European experience. Well-established now in at least three European countries, Hard Shoulder Running (HSR) on motorways is exciting growing interest in the US. A November 2010 Report to Congress by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), on the Efficient Use of Highway Capacity, notes the role of HSR in the European-style Active Traffic Management (ATM) strategies now being recommended for implementation in the US where, until recently, they were virtually unknown.
  • January 14, 2014
    West Virginia opts for Open Roads video analytics
    West Virginia’s Department of Highways (WVDOH) has awarded intelligent transportation systems (ITS) provider Open Roads Consulting a contract to implement a video analytics monitoring system to enhance the advanced transportation management system (ATMS) deployed in the Transportation Management Center (TMC). Open Roads’ OpenTMS ATMS system has been deployed state-wide by WVDOH since 2008; the company says its modular and extensible architecture will seamlessly integrate the video analytics monitoring sy