Skip to main content

TransCore to upgrade Delaware River bridge toll system

The Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission (DRJTBC) has awarded TransCore a US$24.9 million multi-year design-build-maintain contract for a complete overhaul of the agency’s toll collection system infrastructure. The modernisation project will include virtually every aspect of the agency’s toll system: manual cash collections, conventional toll-lane E-ZPass transactions, highway-speed open-road tolling, and future all-electronic tolling at the Scudder Falls replacement bridge.
October 1, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
The 794 Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission (DRJTBC) has awarded 139 TransCore a US$24.9 million multi-year design-build-maintain contract for a complete overhaul of the agency’s toll collection system infrastructure.

The modernisation project will include virtually every aspect of the agency’s toll system: manual cash collections, conventional toll-lane E-ZPass transactions, highway-speed open-road tolling, and future all-electronic tolling at the Scudder Falls replacement bridge.

According to DRJTBC the project will replace the Commission’s rapidly aging toll-collection infrastructure with the latest equipment and technology. The replacement system will then be maintained for an extended period under the same contract.

The project will be broken into two phases. The first phase will involve the design, development, integration, installation and testing of a collection system to handle cash and electronic transactions at the Commission’s seven toll bridges.

This work also will extend to the establishment of an all-electronic tolling system at a future eighth toll bridge, the Scudder Falls Replacement Bridge, the first span of which is expected to become operational in 2019. The new, improved system also will include integration with host computers at the New Jersey Regional Customer Service Center for E-ZPass, which currently provides back-office support and violation enforcement for the Commission’s toll network.

The second phase will involve the maintenance of all the newly installed equipment and operating systems for five years with two additional three-year options. It also will cover the maintenance of existing toll plaza equipment such as LED signage, lane signal indicators and yellow beacons.

Optional work under the contract may include the installation of a toll-collector monitoring system at the Commission’s seven current toll bridges and the installation of self-service kiosks at the agency’s three low-volume toll plazas, at the New Hope-Lambertville, Portland-Columbia and Milford-Montague toll bridges.

A significant aspect of the project will involve the installations of next-generation electronic toll tag readers, enabling the Commission to read toll transponder readers from non-E-ZPass toll agencies once national interoperability is decided and implemented.

Among the anticipated system-wide hardware improvements are: Overhead LED scanners to improve vehicle profiling for toll‐classification purposes; New patron fare displays in the toll lanes; Electronic axle-counting loops in toll lane pavements, enabling removal of current-day mechanical treadles that are expensive to maintain; New violation enforcement cameras for taking front and rear images of vehicles when they pass through a toll lane; New terminals in toll booths, allowing toll collectors to better handle cash transactions; New flash units for enhancing vehicular images recorded by toll violation cameras; and a new digital video system for auditing all toll transactions.

The first phase of modernisation activities is expected to be completed in 16 months, with equipment installation and toll lane conversion work beginning in summer 2016 and ending before the onset of winter. Subsequent maintenance and operation services under the contract are for five years with two three-year options.

To keep the current toll collection system running until the new modernised network comes online in late 2016, the Commission approved two additional contracts: A one-year agreement with 4186 Xerox for maintaining current system hardware and the software for open‐road tolling and violation enforcement; and a one year agreement with TransCore to provide maintenance and support for the software that ties the Commission’s conventional toll system together with computer servers at its respective bridges and the servers at the regional customer service/violations processing centre in Newark, New Jersey.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • CS America deploys ORT lanes for Rhode Island Turnpike & Bridge Authority
    July 10, 2012
    CS America has successfully completed a fast track open road tolling (ORT) project which took just two and a half months to complete, from planning to lane opening, for Rhode Island Turnpike & Bridge Authority (RITBA). The lanes will help maintain traffic flow on this busy thoroughfare over Narragansett Bay, which is host to the 2012 America’s Cup World Series.
  • Toll performance exceeds expectations, improves travel times
    January 30, 2012
    Jean Harito, Attica Tollway Operations Authority and Steve Morello, Egis Projects describe how looking to exceed contractual obligations makes good operational and business sense. The Attica Tollway is a modern, 65km, access-controlled urban motorway with three lanes in each direction. It constitutes the ring road around the extensive metropolitan area of the Greek capital, Athens, and forms the backbone of the entire road network in the Attica region. By ensuring freeflow operating conditions, the Attica T
  • Q-Free to provide image review system for Florida toll upgrade
    January 20, 2016
    Q-Free Open Roads has been awarded a US$5 million tolling contract by TransCore in the US to provide its Intrada Image Review system including a new back office solution for TransCore’s upgrade of Central Florida Expressway Authority’s electronic toll collection system. The contract includes s 7.5-year service agreement. “We are pleased to be a subcontractor to TransCore, one of the largest companies in the world providing rolling and ITS solutions. The award is significant for Q-Free in the US tolling m
  • Growth of contactless parking payment systems
    May 22, 2012
    Wave and pay credit and debit cards have arrived. In the parking sector, authorities and operators quick to accommodate new contactless payment technology are already benefitting We’re on the edge of a contactless revolution,” declares Parkeon’s parking director for the UK and Ireland Danny Hassett. Parkeon reports a groundswell of customers gravitating to contactless credit and debit card payment for parking, and the company is by no means alone in this. Use of ‘wave and pay’ technology is on the verge of