Skip to main content

Iteris announces San Mateo County (Calif.) smart corridor win at ITS America

teris won a $580,000 contract has the final integration phase of the San Mateo Smart Corridor Program, continuing a collaboration of 13 agencies and cities to design, deploy and integrate ITS solutions and strategies along the US-101 corridor in the county.
April 23, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Ramin Massoumi (left) and Scott Carlson celebrating the contract win
73 Iteris has won a $580,000 contract for the final integration phase of the San Mateo Smart Corridor Program, continuing a collaboration of 13 agencies and cities to design, deploy and integrate ITS solutions and strategies along the US-101 corridor in the county.

According to Abbas Mohaddes, president and CEO of Iteris, the integrated corridor management (ICM) project will identify key arterial roads that can serve as emergency alternate routes for diverting traffic off the freeway onto surface streets. Putting minimal impact on local residents and businesses along emergency routes is a key component of the analysis.

San Mateo County, Caltrans and the other local agencies have been early adopter of ICM strategies, and the build out of the entire corridor will demonstrate the benefits of intelligent transportation solutions,” Mohaddes says.

Iteris is responsible for the overall network design from a logical and physical perspective as well as the development and execution of system test plans to ensure all performance elements meet or exceed the system requirements. At the successful conclusion of subsystem testing, Iteris will lead overall system testing to ensure the system operates as an integrated system focused on providing ICM strategies in response to incidents and nonrecurring congestion along the US-101 corridor.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12427 0 oLinkAsset <span class="mouselink">www.Iteris.com</span> www.iteris.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12427 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • High-speed markings measurement from AMAC
    March 25, 2014
    The Advanced Mobile Asset Collection (AMAC) system measures traffic sign and pavement marking retroreflectivity while creating a comprehensive asset inventory and condition assessment. AMAC was developed through a team of engineers, physicists, psychologists and statisticians by DBi/Cidaut Technologies, a partnership between the US’s DBi Serives and Spain’s CIDAUT Foundation.
  • Deutsche Telekom shows contactless parking technology
    March 25, 2014
    Deutsche Telekom is within months of moving into full-scale operation of its new-generation contactless payment kiosks as it tests the technology with initial users. Pilot schemes are already underway for two versions of its MyWallet Kiosk system, Compact and Flexible. Compact processes any card, including those with PIN entry, while Flexible is optimised for payment schemes with contactless or EMV chip and no PIN entry.
  • Wide range of cameras from SVS-Vistek
    October 28, 2014
    German company SVS-Vistek designs and manufactures a wide range of innovative CCD and CMOS cameras, from VGA up to 29 megapixel resolution, for many industrial machine vision and traffic applications.
  • Flir thermal sensors aid police in capturing Boston bombing suspect
    April 23, 2013
    Last Monday morning two bomb blasts went off near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. By Friday night the suspect, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, was in police custody. After he survived a gunfight with police and slipped out of a dragnet, Massachusetts State Police finally spotted him via a thermal imaging technology manufactured by Flir.