Skip to main content

Houston TranStar wins 'Best of Texas' award

Houston TranStar has been awarded "Most Innovative Use of Technology" by the Centre for Digital Government, a national research and advisory institute on information technology policies and best practices in state and local government, for its cutting-edge Bluetooth-based travel time information system. The new deployment, extending north more than 200 miles along the I-45 North corridor to Dallas, gives TranStar the capability to monitor and manage traffic conditions on this major evacuation route.
April 25, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
RSS61 Houston Transtar has been awarded "Most Innovative Use of Technology" by the Centre for Digital Government, a national research and advisory institute on information technology policies and best practices in state and local government, for its cutting-edge 1835 Bluetooth-based travel time information system. The new deployment, extending north more than 200 miles along the I-45 North corridor to Dallas, gives TranStar the capability to monitor and manage traffic conditions on this major evacuation route.

"Houston TranStar is one of the first - if not the first - organisation to implement Bluetooth sensors as a permanent solution to managing traffic," said Houston TranStar director John R. Whaley. "By extending this technology on I-45 between Houston and Dallas, TranStar is continuing down the innovative path for which it is well known and meeting the transportation needs of southeast Texas."

The plan to monitor travel conditions on I-45 came after Hurricane Rita threatened to devastate Southeast Texas in 2005. When millions of Gulf Coast residents evacuated their homes and created a 30-mile traffic jam from downtown Houston along I-45 North, TranStar officials recognised the need for a more extensive traffic monitoring system.

The City of Houston, TxDOT (two of Houston TranStar's four member agencies) and the 232 Texas Transportation Institute (TTI) began to investigate solutions to capture real-time travel times and traffic speed data on arterials and freeways. TTI, a state agency within the Texas A&M University System, found that Bluetooth-enabled devices could be used to determine accurate travel times, and could do so in a cost-effective, non-intrusive way that protects privacy and that is easy to install and maintain.

"The Bluetooth-based Anonymous Wireless Address Matching system, or AWAM, can typically be deployed at less than 10 per cent of the cost of traditional toll-tag based travel monitoring systems," said Stuart Corder, TxDOT's director of Transportation Operations, Houston District. "This new system saved taxpayers $1.5 million and let us accelerate implementation of new technology on a major Interstate."

Travel time information is not only available during evacuations, but is accessible 24 hours/7 days a week to provide current travel times between Houston and Dallas. The sensors collect anonymous data that cannot be used to gather personal information. All data collected by the sensors are encrypted upon receipt before being sent to TranStar for processing. The information can be viewed on Houston TranStar's website at www.houstontranstar.org.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Connected citizens boosts Boston’s traffic management
    March 30, 2017
    Data-derived traffic management is starting to show benefits as David Crawford discovers. The city of Boston has been facing growing congestion problems in its Seaport regeneration district, with the rate of commercial and residential growth threatening to overtake the capacity of the road network to respond.
  • California DOT installs driver information signs
    January 29, 2013
    California DOT (Caltrans) is installing electronic message signs in an effort to prevent or reduce congestion on the heavily used Interstate 10. Vehicle detection systems have also been installed on the 133 mile stretch of freeway to monitor traffic. The detection systems monitor speed and traffic volume, processing the data and transmitting it to the freeway message signs to give motorists real-time journey time estimates. "Changeable message signs will allow us to deliver information directly to drivers
  • Developments in security for wireless communications networks
    July 20, 2012
    David Crawford looks at new developments in security for wireless communications networks. Wireless communications - including mobile phone links - are well recognised as a key transport technology. They are low-cost, easily installed, well supported by the wider IT industry and offer the protocols of choice for much metropolitan area networking on which transport applications can piggyback.
  • Connecticut Transit uses web feedback to improve user experience
    May 27, 2014
    Connecticut champions open government and open data to help fostertransparency, accountability and citizen engagement – and that includes transportation matters as Andrew Bardin Williams discovers. The last thing anyone wanted was to inconvenience or displace others - least of all people who lived and worked in the neighbourhood. Yet, workers in an office building in downtown New Haven, Conn., were tired of shuffling through hoards of people who kept sitting on the stoop to the building while waiting for th