Skip to main content

USDOT webinar: variable speed limits – are they for everyone?

The USDOT's Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Professional Capacity Building program will host a free webinar, ‘Variable Speed Limits: Are They for Everyone?’ on Tuesday, 4 April from 1300 to 1430. The webinar will be hosted by Jimmy Chu, a transportation specialist for the Federal Highway Administration's Traveller Information Management Team. Variable speed limit (VSL) systems use information on traffic speed, occupancy, volume detection, weather, and road surface condition to determine appropri
March 10, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The USDOT's Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Professional Capacity Building program will host a free webinar, ‘Variable Speed Limits: Are They for Everyone?’ on Tuesday, 4 April from 1300 to 1430. The webinar will be hosted by Jimmy Chu, a transportation specialist for the 831 Federal Highway Administration's Traveller Information Management Team.

Variable speed limit (VSL) systems use information on traffic speed, occupancy, volume detection, weather, and road surface condition to determine appropriate speeds that drivers should travel given current roadway and traffic conditions. The use of VSL during less than ideal conditions can improve safety by decreasing the risks associated with travelling at speeds that are higher than appropriate for the conditions and by reducing speed variance in traffic. In addition, VSL can be used to dynamically manage speeds during planned and unplanned events. In conjunction with managed lanes and other active traffic management strategies, VSL can help respond to downstream congestion to eliminate or delay bottlenecks and mitigate the possibility of crashes.

Attendees of this webinar can expect to learn about: Real-world examples of existing, deactivated, and planned VSL systems in the United States and other parts of the world and the state of the practice of VSL operations. The webinar will also cover successful and best practices from perspectives such as planning, policy, design, deployment, standards, operations, maintenance and outcomes.

More information and registration details are on the USDOT %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal website Visit www.pcb.its.dot.gov website false http://www.pcb.its.dot.gov/t3/s170404_Variable_Speed_Limits_Systems.asp false false%>.

Related Content

  • June 12, 2014
    CHAMP final workshop
    The European Cycling Heroes Advancing sustainable Mobility Practice (CHAMP) project will come to an end in September 2014. The final workshop takes place in Gent, Belgium on 11-12 September. The CHAMP project brings together leading cities in the field of cycling. Within the project, they have looked at innovative ways to further boost cycling in their cities and enhance local policies. CHAMP has developed and tested a performance analysis tool, building on self-analysis as well as peer review by ot
  • March 25, 2014
    Snoline’s improved crash cushion offers greater safety
    Italian firm Snoline says that its Tau Tube redirective crash cushion offers low-cost crash protection. Paula Ferraris, communications & marketing manager for the firm said: “It is like the previous Tau but with a new impact absorbing system. It can stop a car travelling at 110km/h in less than 7m.” The system is said to be simple to install and is designed for long life, with a galvanised steel structure and meets the European EN1317-3 safety criteria. The impact absorbing beams are made from aluminium and
  • November 15, 2012
    Logging on to public transport
    Cape Town’s public transport commuters can now use their cell phones to access real-time timetables and plan their routes, whether they are travelling by train, taxi, MyCiTi buses or the city’s Golden Arrow Bus service. FindMyWay is a free public service website that brings together all the modes of transport within the city, so that commuters can easily access the information in one place. Logging on to www.findmyway.mobi and www.gometro.co.za from a cell phone with an internet connection gives commuters
  • August 26, 2014
    US DoT present virtual drive through the future of transportation
    If you feel like taking a Virtual Drive Through the Future of Transportation, then head for the US DOT booth #1201. The organisation is working with the researchers at the National Advanced Driving Simulator (NADS) at the University of Iowa to develop short driving simulator scenarios demonstrating a variety of vehicle-to-infrastructure, vehicle-to-pedestrian, and vehicle-to-vehicle applications.