Skip to main content

Iteris secures $2.45m ATIS deal

Iteris will design, implement, operate and maintain a new travel information and navigation service for the Abu Dhabi Department of Transport—the first such system in the Middle East. The service will be similar to a new traveler information and 511 system Iteris is deploying in Virginia.
May 20, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Moe Zarean Vice President of Iteris Eastern region
73 Iteris will design, implement, operate and maintain a new travel information and navigation service for the Abu Dhabi Department of Transport—the first such system in the Middle East. The service will be similar to a new traveler information and 511 system Iteris is deploying in Virginia.

“We’re giving drivers advanced travel information directly to their vehicles so they can see accidents and congestion in advance, make informed navigation decisions and ultimately reduce travel times,” said Moe Zarean, Vice President of Iteris Eastern Region.

The project is worth $2.45 million and will be run through Iteris’s Abu Dhabi office with support from its U.S. based staff. Design and implementation will start immediately and the system is expected to be operational in early 2013. The project also includes a two-year operations and maintenance agreement through 2014.

The Virginia project—started in 2011 and set to launch this week—modernizes the state’s 511 advanced travel information system in time for the busy summer travel season. It includes a traveler information website (www.511virginia.org), a new 511 Interactive Voice Response (IVR) Phone System and two new mobile applications. A new feature that helps travelers navigate to the state’s beaches is going live on Wednesday.

Iteris also helped Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) integrate 800 CCTV cameras and data resources from five regional operation centers in a single, standardized video and data distribution center.

“The system integrates the latest technologies and facilitates better management of the roadways for all parties while simplifying the access to information for travelers—all these functions [arrive] just in time for the holiday travel,” said Abbas Mohaddes, President and CEO of Iteris.

%$Linker: Asset 4 12427 0 oLinkExternal <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

  • Sistemas Palazón demonstrates sliding safety device
    March 25, 2014
    Reducing damage to vehicles and their passengers in impacts with street furniture is the object of a new type of mounting being shown by Spanish company Sistemas Palazón. Despite the huge sums of money spent by car manufacturers on improving the safety of their vehicles, severe damage can still be caused if they hit unyielding objects.
  • TransCore's $3M deal
    May 21, 2012
    TransCore has been selected by the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission (NJMC) to deploy the SCATS adaptive traffic control system across almost 130 intersections in the Hackensack Meadowlands District – the fourth-largest deployment of its type in the US. The $3 million contract was predominantly funded by the Commission’s TIGER II grant to implement the Meadowlands Adaptive Signal System for Traffic Reduction (MASSTR) program. The programme will be completed by December 2013.
  • Edesix shows VideoBadge2 solution for enforcement staff
    March 26, 2014
    Edesix is showing a new version of its VideoBadge, which deters confrontations between the public and enforcement staff by filming incidents. The original VideoBadge, which is worn on the enforcement or police officer’s clothing, was introduced in 2011; by sliding down the front, the camera lens was exposed and started to record the scene, while a visible sign saying ‘recording in process’ was revealed. This frequently was enough to stop a verbal dispute developing into a physical one.
  • 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.