Skip to main content

TransSuite success!

TransCore has announced today at the ITS America Annual Meeting that it has completed one of the fastest TransSuite deployments, for the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT), encompassing more than 1,200 centerline miles and nearly 800+ total devices. And the company has also unveiled a new mobile iPad app for the advanced traffic management system (ATMS) so that agency engineers or managers can monitor traffic conditions and system operations from anywhere at any time.
May 20, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
With TransCore’s iPad mobile app, real time traffic situations can be managed remotely
139 Transcore has announced today at the ITS America Annual Meeting that it has completed one of the fastest TransSuite deployments, for the 1773 Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT), encompassing more than 1,200 centerline miles and nearly 800+ total devices.

And the company has also unveiled a new mobile iPad app for the advanced traffic management system (ATMS) so that agency engineers or managers can monitor traffic conditions and system operations from anywhere at any time.

In Missouri, TransSuite replaces the existing traffic management software used for the MoDOT-Gateway Guide program, a system designed to relieve congestion and improve safety in the greater St. Louis region, and the 19th-largest urban area in the nation.
“By deploying TransSuite, MoDOT will have more sophisticated integration among various traffic systems so the Gateway Guide engineers can control their roadway networks with increased precision and respond to traffic situations as they occur," says Jim Wilson, TransCore Vice President overseeing the team of engineers dedicated to the MoDOT project.

MoDOT deployed nine of the standard TransSuite system modules, which covered systems including video wall and camera control, sign control, detection collection, map interface, emergency and construction management, data reporting and extraction tools, CAD interface, web page system access, and the XML exporter service.

%$Linker: Asset 4 12662 0 oLinkExternal <span class="mouselink">www.TransCore.com</span> www.transcore.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12662 false false%>

Related Content

  • Smartcycle discriminates between cycles and vehicles, aids cycle safety
    February 27, 2014
    The SmartCycle software upgrade to the entire Vantage family discriminately detects bicycles anywhere in a VIDS’ field of view while simultaneously providing “regular” detection of all other vehicles in the same unit. The separate bike only detection output enables enhanced safety for cyclists and signalised intersection efficiency - longer passage times are granted only when a bike is detected.
  • Pole mounted safety solution minimises vehicle damage, injuries
    February 26, 2014
    The product consists of a metal box installed under urban equipment, such as streetlamps, pillars, and signposts. In the event of an impact from a vehicle, the equipment will release very easily so damage to the bodywork will be minimised, as will injuries and human losses.
  • Iteris introduces VantageNext video image platform
    March 24, 2014
    Iteris is introducing at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 its revolutionary new video image processing platform, designed for high performance detection while reducing time, space, and cost. The company says that VantageNext combines nearly 20 years of global video detection expertise with the most innovative system available today.
  • Next generation traffic data collection
    March 5, 2014
    Swedish company Sensebit will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to launch the next generation traffic data collection - the Sensebit Traffic Measurement System (STMS). It offers remotely managed, accurate and cost efficient collection of traffic data using vehicle detectors, like the STMS WD-300, in multiple configurations, installed in the road surface that collect and upload traffic data via the internet. The traffic data can either be accessed through a web interface or automatically transferred to othe