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

  • IRF Awards 2025 demonstrate 'bold vision' of mobility
    July 3, 2025
    Econolite and TRL Software among winners at ceremony in Athens, Greece
  • Peru lines up road, rail concessions for 2015
    November 20, 2014
    Peru plans to award next year infrastructure concessions including rail and road projects. Hydro and thermal power plants and liquefied petroleum gas distribution in the capital are also being lined up, a senior government official has said. Concessions will include the fourth stretch of the Longitudinal de la Sierra highway, which calls for the construction, operation and maintenance of a 640 kilometre stretch of Peru's Longitudinal de la Sierra highway, connecting Huancayo, Izcuchaca, Mayoc and Ayacuch
  • Towards intelligent road infrastructure
    October 8, 2021
    A digital transformation is happening in the world today and the result is that Europe’s transport infrastructure, and also the car industry are experiencing revolutionary changes. Jēkabs Krastiņš looks at the challenges and plots the road ahead.
  • Siemens to implement motorway junction improvements
    February 13, 2015
    Siemens is to supply and install traffic signals and controllers for two major junction improvements schemes on the M27 motorway in Hampshire, UK. The contracts, which are funded by the UK government’s US$488 million pinch point scheme, have been awarded by civil contractors Interserve Construction and Jackson Civil Engineering and are intended to help alleviate the flow of traffic joining and leaving the busy M27 junctions 3 and 5. The upgrade work, which is already underway, will see additional lane