Skip to main content

Georgia DoT to award five traffic signal contracts 

Virtual information session for interested parties takes place on 27 May 
By Adam Hill May 18, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Traffic signal contracts up for grabs in Georgia (© Tzogia Kappatou | Dreamstime.com)

Georgia Department of Transportation (GDoT)’s Office of Traffic Operations plans to award five contracts related to traffic signal operations this year. 

To give potential proposers an understanding of the contract needs, it will hold a virtual information session on 27 May at 1pm local time using Microsoft Teams.

GDoT staff will describe the full programme, including details of goals and proposed schedule, and will answer questions.

Three of the contracts will be for the Metro Atlanta area, with two state-wide traffic signal operations support programmes also on the table.
  
For questions about the traffic signal and support contracts, contact Metro Atlanta signal operations engineer Kate Shearin at [email protected] 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TfL awards supply and maintenance contracts
    February 16, 2017
    Clearview Intelligence has been awarded two new contract wins by Transport for London (TfL) to work on the supply and maintenance of automatic traffic and cycle counting equipment across the TfL road network. The contract not only covers regular scheduled maintenance of existing equipment but also the supply of any new or replacement equipment when required across the 304 automatic counter sites and the 170 automatic cycle counter locations. These contracts have been awarded on an initial two year ba
  • European progress on road deaths 'disappointing', says ETSC
    June 18, 2020
    Safety body suggests that the EU will miss its target of halving fatalities by 2020
  • 2012 US Urban Mobility Report published
    February 8, 2013
    Researchers at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) have come up with a way to measure the unreliability of trip times due to traffic congestion. The Planning Time Index (PTI) illustrates the amount of extra time needed to arrive on time for higher priority events, such as an airline departure, just-in-time shipments, medical appointments or especially important social commitments. If the PTI for a particular trip is 3.00, a traveller would allow sixty minutes for a trip that typically takes twenty
  • Final 2012/2013 AERIS webinar
    March 1, 2013
    The fifth and final webinar of the AERIS Fall//Winter 2012-2013 Webinar Series will take place on Wednesday, March 13, 2013 at 1:00 pm EST. The webinar will describe the results of a recent connected vehicle field experiment performed in two locations (University of California at Riverside and the Turner Fairbank Highway Research Center). Complementary modelling results will also be described. The field experiment was conducted in August 2012 and was based on the AERIS Program's Eco-Approach and Departure a