Skip to main content

Arizona DoT trials dust-warning system along I-10

Arizona Department of Transportation (ADoT) has developed a system to tell drivers to slow down on part of Interstate 10 (I-10) where blowing dust reduces visibility.
November 21, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

ADoT is installing sensors, overhead message boards, variable speed limit signs, speed-feedback signs and closed-circuit cameras along the 10 mile stretch between Eloy and Picacho Peak. The prototype system is expected to begin operating in the coming weeks between mileposts 209 and 219.

Drivers entering this section of the I-10 can already see signs saying Caution: Variable Speed Limit Corridor. This alerts drivers to programmable signs that can instantly reduce the legal speed limit, ADoT says.

The variable speed limit signs are placed every 1,000 feet for the first mile in each direction and then every two miles can change from 75mph to 35mph when there is blowing dust.

Electronic message boards placed five miles apart will alert drivers to the dust, while ADoT traffic operators can use overhead message boards on the way towards the detection zone to warn drivers of potentially hazardous conditions.

Closed-circuit cameras will allow staff at ADoT’s traffic operations centre in Phoenix to see the real-time conditions on the roadway, while in-pavement sensors will report the speed and flow of traffic.

The system’s weather radar will be mounted on a 20-foot tower at the State Route 87 interchange in Elroy - which ADoT says can detect storms more than 40 miles away. It will work with 13 sensors mounted on posts next to the freeway that use beams of light to determine the density of dust particles in the air.

The $6.5 million system is partly funded by a $54 million federal Fastlane grant that ADoT received for I-10 projects to widen stretches between Eloy and Picacho and Interstate 8 in the city of Casa Grande to three lanes in each direction.

Despite the system, ADoT recommends that drivers avoid travelling if a severe storm is imminent. A motorist should pull far off the roadway, turn off their lights and remove their foot from the brake if caught in a sudden dust storm in or beyond the pilot area, ADoT adds.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Wavetronix focuses on SmartSensor HD side-fire radar
    March 19, 2018
     SmartSensor HD is the focus of the Wavetronix stand and visitors will see the power of HD as an alternative to traffic loops. The non-intrusive sensor installs above the road, which can reduce costs and keep road workers safer and out of the way of traffic during installation.
  • Rhode Island installing wrong-way driver signing
    November 21, 2014
    Rhode Island Department of Transport (RIDOT) is undertaking a US$2 million project to upgrade the signing and striping at 145 locations, more than 200 actual ramps, and install detection systems at 24 high-risk areas. The systems not only alert a driver who travelling in the wrong direction, they notify police and other motorists of a potential wrong-way driver. At the two dozen high-risk areas, most in the Providence metropolitan area, new detection systems will sense if a driver has entered a highway o
  • IBM and NXP partner on Dutch connected car pilot
    February 21, 2013
    The first results of a smarter traffic pilot, conducted in the Dutch city of Eindhoven by IBM and NXP Semiconductors demonstrate how the connected car automatically shares braking, acceleration and location data that can be analysed by the central traffic authority to identify and resolve road network issues, say the companies. “The trial successfully showed that anonymous information from vehicles can be analysed by local traffic authorities to resolve road network issues faster, reduce congestion and impr
  • Progressing work zone safety systems
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford investigates progress in a key safety area - work zones. Highway construction zone safety is taken seriously enough in the US to merit a special spring National Work Zone Awareness Week, which in 2010 ran from 19-23 April. Headed by the US Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), this aims to reduce an annual toll of work zone deaths - 720 in 2008 (an average of one every 10 hours) with more than 40,000 traffic injuries (an average of one every 13 minutes).