Skip to main content

Best of ITS award for Idaho’s Vaisala road weather system

The Vaisala road weather system deployed by Idaho Transportation Department has won a "Best New Innovative Product, Service or Application for 2013" award at the 2013 National Rural ITS Conference in St Cloud, Minnesota. The award highlights new technology that furthers the development and/or deployment of rural intelligent transportation systems (ITS) applications, as well as specific and measurable outcomes that result from the product or service. The Idaho Transportation Department, using Vaisala's
September 9, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The 144 Vaisala road weather system deployed by 7477 Idaho Transportation Department has won a "Best New Innovative Product, Service or Application for 2013" award at the 2013 National Rural ITS Conference in St Cloud, Minnesota.  The award highlights new technology that furthers the development and/or deployment of rural intelligent transportation systems (ITS) applications, as well as specific and measurable outcomes that result from the product or service.
 
The Idaho Transportation Department, using Vaisala's pavement sensors that calculate grip or friction values, discovered that this value can also be used to measure the success of the department's winter road maintenance operations.  Idaho personnel developed several indexes that calculated operational performance and were able to normalise any variance caused by storms and seasons.  Vaisala supported this development by integrating the indexes into their RoadDSS Navigator software which allows decision-makers to quickly review the indexes alongside their other decision-making tools.
 
Vaisala's road weather system provides real value to winter maintenance operations in Idaho, according to Dennis Jensen, mobility services winter maintenance coordinator. "We had a pretty significant year, this year (2012-13), and preliminary estimates, appears that we have had a ten to twenty per cent reduction in US$7 million dollar chemical usage budget," he says.

Says Paul Bridge, Vaisala Roads’ offering manager and meteorologist: "We are very proud to hear that our technology has been acknowledged as the most innovative in the industry".

Related Content

  • August 20, 2019
    Vaisala's RoadAI can optimise maintenance
    Alerts for natural disasters are ones that most of us would rather do without, writes Adam Hill. But the ITS industry still needs help to deal with more common meteorological issues Google Maps has added SOS alerts to its service. For those of us more used to using the phone app to navigate from a metro station to an unfamiliar restaurant, this may seem extreme. But this is not what Google has in mind. Its SOS messages are for “hurricane forecast cones, earthquake shake-maps and flood forecasts”. That
  • September 6, 2017
    Options abound for road weather sensing
    Meteorological organisations invest millions in super-computers to crunch data for ever-more accurate forecasts but inherent unpredictability means that other methods of alerting drivers and road authorities to fast-changing weather and highway conditions are essential. For years, static weather sensors to measure factors such as surface water, ice or high roadway temperatures have been embedded in highways to provide such data. But that is changing.
  • September 26, 2014
    Keeping a weather eye on road conditions
    Drive C2X has shown that advanced warning of poor road conditions could cut fatalities, as David Crawford explains. Connected vehicle (CV)-based warning technologies could mean 6% fewer deaths and 5% fewer injuries in road traffic accidents in Europe, according to the final results of the European Commission (EC) co-funded DRIVE C2X project. According to the European Centre for Information and Communication Technologies (EICT) which provided management support, these “prove that CV systems work and can hav
  • March 7, 2013
    Vaisala divests non-weather product lines
    In line with its long term strategy, Finnish road weather information technology company Vaisala has carried out a review of its products and has sold three non-weather product ranges, distance measuring instruments, portable traffic analysers, and highway advisory radio systems, to its US distributor, M H Corbin. M H Corbin is an established Vaisala distributor in Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York. In addition to the three new product ranges, the company has also been a distributor of Vaisala’