Skip to main content

Washington in focus

For nearly two decades, the highly populated Washington Metropolitan area has experienced unrelenting growth in traffic volumes. Mitigating the concomitant problems resulted in the establishment of the Washington Corridor Initiative and significant local ITS initiatives which are the focus of events, sessions, and tours as an integral part of year’s ITS America Annual Meeting.
May 20, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Night shot of Washington Noght Trails
For nearly two decades, the highly populated Washington Metropolitan area has experienced unrelenting growth in traffic volumes. Mitigating the concomitant problems resulted in the establishment of the Washington Corridor Initiative and significant local ITS initiatives which are the focus of events, sessions, and tours as an integral part of year’s ITS America Annual Meeting.
Keeping transportation moving in a highly populated region is no easy task, and when that area is the Washington Metropolitan area the problems are compounded. No other part of the country sees more public gatherings of the size that come to the nation’s capital, all with their security and traffic management implications. It’s an area that also has its weather and geological challenges with snowstorms, hurricanes, and earthquakes.

To complicate things further, with Washington, DC at its centre, the area also takes in chunks of Maryland and Virginia. Without close coordination between their departments of transportation, and other agencies, a nightmare scenario would be played out every day and the nation’s capital would grind to a standstill.

That it doesn’t, and why and how it doesn’t, is the result of a high level of orchestration and coordination between public agencies, the private sector, and also, significant local ITS deployments. Little wonder then that at this year’s Annual Meeting 560 ITS America is firmly throwing the spotlight on the Washington Corridor Initiative.

This morning there is an invitation-only Washington Region Transportation Leaders breakfast from 8.00-9.30am, moderated by former USDOT deputy secretary, Mort Downey, which brings together leaders from Maryland, DC and Virginia to discuss the challenges they face and the innovations they are bringing to bear to serve the transportation needs of their jurisdictions.

But you don’t have to be there to get a good grasp of the issues and challenges: at some time during this event, make sure you take time to stop by Booth 135 in the exhibition hall where you will find the Washington Corridor Initiative Display. If you do, you will be able to network, engage with the practitioners, and obtain the latest information on the ITS deployments throughout the region.

If you want to look at things more closely, there’s a special session today specifically about the corridor: SS06 Coordinating Transportation Operations in the Washington Corridor, from 4.00-5.30pm, will discuss the highly orchestrated coordination that takes place between the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia transportation agencies. Other special sessions devoted to the Washington Corridor include SS22 Keeping the Travelling Public in the Know, tomorrow from 2.00-3.30pm, and SS40 Keeping Transportation Moving in a Highly Populated Region on Wednesday from 2.00pm-3.300pm. This comprehensive session will highlight the District of Columbia’s ITS Master Plan and its optimisation and critical infrastructure initiatives; Maryland’s programme to offer dynamic message sign information to travellers, and Virginia’s Beltway Express Lanes program and its arterial transportation management activities.

For a more hands-on, in-depth insight, then check out the tour programme. Today, from 1.00-4.00pm, you have a unique opportunity to visit the District of Columbia DOT Operations Centre.

The tour costs $55, while tomorrow from 11.00am-3.30pm you have an opportunity of taking the Virginia Transportation Operations and I-495 Express Lanes Tour which costs $80 but lunch is included. Also tomorrow, from 1.30-5.30pm, there’s a free tour to the Saxton Transportation Operations Laboratory, the newest laboratory at FHWA’s Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ITS Australia announces 2013 awards winners
    November 29, 2013
    From young professionals to lifetime achievers, the ITS Australia awards ceremony recognised leading industry contributors at the end of a busy 2013 event calendar. Winners were announced before more than 110 industry leaders in Melbourne last week and the Awards program was well supported with nominations from a wide cross section of industry sectors. Winners included Keith Aldridge who was posthumously awarded the Max Lay lifetime achievement award for his creative vision, passion and dedication to
  • Meeting overview and highlights
    April 15, 2013
    This year's Annual Meeting and Exposition in Nashville, Tenn., features more public sector participation than ever before. The event will kick off on Sunday, April 21 with a State DOT Roundtable featuring 20 State DOT CEOs from across the country, as well as feature senior US Department of Transportation (DOT) officials including Under Secretary for Policy Polly Trottenberg, Federal Highway Administrator Victor Mendez, National Highway Traffic Safety Administrator David Strickland, Federal Motor Carrier Saf
  • ITS America Announces 2014 Best of ITS Awards Finalists
    August 26, 2014
    ITS America has announced the list of finalists for the 2014 Best of ITS Awards, the highly competitive program which recognises the most innovative projects and influential achievements in the high-tech transportation community. Finalists will be recognised, and the winners announced, during the ITS America Awards Breakfast session at the 21st World Congress on Intelligent Transport Systems, Tuesday, September 9, 2014 from 7:30 to 8:30am at the Cobo Center in Detroit, Michigan. The Best of ITS Awards rec
  • President Obama says V2V and V2I technology will save lives
    July 16, 2014
    US president Barack Obama has highlighted his Administration’s support for intelligent transportation systems as a job creator and high-tech solution for reducing vehicle crashes and traffic gridlock. Intelligent Transportation Society of America (ITS America) members and staff joined President Obama at the Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center in McLean, Virginia, where the President toured the research and testing facility and delivered remarks on the importance of vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicl