Skip to main content

I-95 Corridor Coalition selects Inrix for real-time traffic information

Inrix has been selected by the I-95 Corridor Coalition as one of their preferred providers of real-time traffic information. The majority of member states in the I-95 Corridor Coalition are continuing to use Inrix XD traffic information to help them streamline daily operations, pinpoint investments and deliver better traveller services. The I-95 Corridor Coalition is an alliance of transportation agencies, toll authorities, and related organisations, including public safety, from the State of Maine to t
September 12, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
163 Inrix has been selected by the I-95 Corridor Coalition as one of their preferred providers of real-time traffic information. The majority of member states in the I-95 Corridor Coalition are continuing to use Inrix XD traffic information to help them streamline daily operations, pinpoint investments and deliver better traveller services.

The I-95 Corridor Coalition is an alliance of transportation agencies, toll authorities, and related organisations, including public safety, from the State of Maine to the State of Florida, with affiliate members in Canada.

Inrix will provide real-time and historical traffic information as well as incident information for more than 40,000 miles of roads, ramps and interchanges, continuing a collaboration started nearly seven years ago.

As part of its continued collaboration, Inrix services being offered to Coalition members have expanded to include:  the ability to cover more roads with greater precision, using Inrix XD traffic services; arterial quality, extending data quality commitments beyond freeways to major arterials delivering real-time traffic speeds accurate within 10 mph; actionable incident insight, using Inrix XD to correlate flow data with incident information to deliver better insight that includes queue length and location, traffic speed and overall delay time through the impacted area; and significantly improved pricing.

“Since the Coalition’s inception, we’ve successfully demonstrated time and again how technology can help transportation agencies do more with less,” said George Schoener, executive director of the I-95 Corridor Coalition. “We appreciate Inrix’s efforts, commitment and continued contributions to our success.”

“We have been working with the Coalition for many years, allowing us to demonstrate the quality and reliability of our data and its ability to enable a wide array of mission critical uses by state DOTs, metropolitan planning organisations and their partner agencies,” said Rick Schuman, Inrix’s vice president and general manager of public sector.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK Highways Agency awards contract to provide national traffic information
    January 30, 2012
    The UK Highways Agency has announced the award of a new seven-year, US$93 million, contract to provide the National Traffic Information Service, to Network Information Services (NIS), a joint venture between Mouchel and Thales UK.
  • Inrix and Citi Logik join forces to deliver movement analytics
    August 16, 2016
    Inrix has entered a strategic agreement with Citi Logik in a partnership that will combine mobile network data provided via Citi Logik with Inrix’s network of GPS data and advanced analytics tools to generate population movement insights for UK transport agencies, local governments, city planners and retailers. Accurate population movement insights are important for governments as they invest in transport infrastructure and improve urban mobility as more people move into the UK’s population centres. W
  • Traffic monitoring and hard shoulder running
    March 1, 2013
    Hard shoulder running is on the increase – and the detection and monitoring of incidents on affected roads is occupying the minds of experts across Europe and the US
  • FOTsis targets ‘socially inclusive’ cooperative ITS
    December 5, 2013
    The FOTsis project addresses the imbalances between the vehicular and infrastructure sides of cooperative ITS infrastructures and looks to ensure road operators can help to enrich future technology applications. By Jason Barnes. Several developments have conspired to push the vehicular side of cooperative infrastructures/cooperative ITS to the fore in recent years. The automotive industry’s rather shorter product development and lifecycles combined with economic slowdown in many regions gave rise to the not