Skip to main content

Dallas launches ICM program

Transportation officials in the Dallas area are to introduce an Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) along the 28-mile US 75 from the city to its northern suburbs. ICM works by collecting data about traffic conditions, then sending it through software that can analyse the data and help operators select the best strategies for managing it. A web interface ensures all the relevant agencies working on the corridor are aware of what is happening. Commuters will be advised of the situation via a new website
August 28, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Transportation officials in the Dallas area are to introduce an Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) along the 28-mile US 75 from the city to its northern suburbs.
 
ICM works by collecting data about traffic conditions, then sending it through software that can analyse the data and help operators select the best strategies for managing it. A web interface ensures all the relevant agencies working on the corridor are aware of what is happening. Commuters will be advised of the situation via a new website and electronic signage will also direct drivers to alternate routes in the event of an accident or congestion. The idea is that if traffic on the frontage road is light, officials can take advantage of the capacity that's largely being unused.
 
"What you're going to experience is a more reliable trip, less congestion and less queuing," says Koorosh Olyai, who led the ICM project while assistant vice president for mobility programs development at 1275 Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART). Olyai now works in the private sector for the firm Stantec, but continues to assist DART on the project.
 
Dallas was selected by the 324 US Department of Transportation as a pilot site for ICM because of its high traffic congestion. US75 is the perfect place to test the concept, given the range of transportation assets along the corridor: a freeway with frontage roads, managed HOV lanes, a tollway, 167 miles of arterial roads, bus routes, a light rail line and 900 traffic signals. The highway itself carries about 250,000 vehicles every weekday.
 
"All the agencies were really facing a situation where, alone, we'd pretty much done everything we could to make things better," says Robert Saylor, transportation engineering and operations manager with the city of Richardson, a Dallas suburb. "The only way to improve beyond what we're doing would be to do some coordinated actions."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Congestion pricing - no such thing as a free ride
    October 2, 2018
    The widespread adoption of autonomous vehicles is likely to increase congestion, many experts believe. But Wes Guckert of Traffic Group believes that tolling could provide the answer. While it is still hard to wrap your head around the idea of getting into a vehicle without a driver, the industry is now used to hearing, reading, participating in the advancement of autonomous vehicles (AVs). Those in the industry have heard about Uber delivering a shipment of Budweiser, or the convoy of driverless trucks
  • The inside story of how traffic chaos was avoided after I-95 collapse
    August 23, 2023
    June’s collapse of major US roadway I-95 in Pennsylvania could have caused lengthy traffic chaos. But - relatively speaking at least - it didn’t and gridlock was avoided. Alan Dron finds out why
  • No in-road equipment for Queensland's free flow toll bridge
    February 1, 2012
    By May this year, the new Gateway Bridge in Brisbane, which is being built alongside an existing bridge, will be open. With it will come an end-to-end free-flow tolling system. Interview with Sue Caelers, Queensland Motorway Ltd. Queensland Motorways Ltd owns and operates 61km of roadway in the area around Brisbane, Australia. This includes the Gateway Bridge and the Gateway Extension, Logan and Port of Brisbane motorways.
  • Enforcement a key part of the road safety solution
    January 31, 2012
    The Partnership for Advancing Road Safety is a new organisation set up in the US to push the national debate on speed and intersection safety, something which hitherto has been absent. Here, executive director David Kelly explains the organisation's work. With moves to address drink/drug driving and the wearing of seatbelts starting to prove successful in the US, the use of inappropriate speed and poor driving at intersections have become responsible for a proportionately greater number of the deaths and in