Skip to main content

ODOT plans ‘smarter highway’

Until they can raise the US$1 billion it would take to expand congestion-plagued Oregon 217, state traffic planners say they'll focus on making it a smarter highway. Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) engineers believe that a US$6.5 million artificial traffic intelligence project planned for the 217 corridor will permanently alter the Portland metro area's daily commuting culture. The interconnected system will rely on new underground sensors and advanced computer algorithms. The federal government
May 2, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Until they can raise the US$1 billion it would take to expand congestion-plagued Oregon 217, state traffic planners say they'll focus on making it a smarter highway.

5837 Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) engineers believe that a US$6.5 million artificial traffic intelligence project planned for the 217 corridor will permanently alter the Portland metro area's daily commuting culture.

The interconnected system will rely on new underground sensors and advanced computer algorithms. The federal government is providing most of the funding.

The next phase will happen later this year, when ODOT switches on a series of giant LED screens giving motorists estimated times to key locations and interchanges, as well as crash alerts and lane closures.

Meanwhile, engineers will install sensors into the looping, crash-prone interchange with US 26 that will take moisture readings and flash speed warnings to drivers when the road is wet.

The system is designed to work about a mile-and-a-half before motorists hit serious gridlock, said Matt Beaulieu, a 451 Washington State Department of Transportation engineer.

"Obviously, no one needs to be told to slow if traffic is already crawling," Beaulieu said. "But these are for the people coming up to slow traffic. They're intended to get them to pay attention, to avoid panic braking and erratic last-minute lane changing.

"Ultimately, you can't build your way out of congestion," he said. "But you can make a system that's more reliable, so that the commute doesn't vary so much from day to day."

Related Content

  • August 29, 2024
    Hayden AI & Snapper Services keep their eyes on the road
    Snapper Services CEO Miki Szikszai and Chris Carson, CEO of Hayden AI, tell Adam Hill about synergy and partnership – and how to make use of data once you’ve gathered it
  • March 2, 2012
    Loop detection still has a part in traffic management
    Bob Lees, co-founder of Diamond Consulting Services, on why the loop detector just refuses to go away. The more strident proponents of newer and emergent detection technologies are quick to highlight what they see as the disadvantages, and hence the imminent passing, of the humble inductive loop. The more prosaic will acknowledge that loops continue to have a part to play in traffic management, falling back on the assertion that it is all a question of application. And yet year after year the loop, despite
  • January 26, 2012
    GIS-based state of the art emergency response, damage recovery
    The gecko is one of several members of the lizard family which demonstrate autotomy: the ability to re-grow a tail or some other appendage lost during a time of peril. The GITA's GECCo programme is looking to give US infrastructures much the same capability
  • January 30, 2012
    Mounting benefits of dynamic tolling project
    Wisconsin's four-year HOT lanes pilot project, launched in May 2008, cost US$18.8 million to construct. Halfway into the project, which uses variably priced, or dynamic, tolling to improve highway efficiency, the benefits are mounting. The problem was obvious, and frustrating, to anyone who ever sat in bumper-to-bumper traffic on State Route 167 and watched a lone car whiz by every 20 seconds or so in the carpool lane. But for planners at the Washington State Department of Transportation, the conundrum was