September/October 2002
Internet
Watch
by
Keri Funderburg
Traffic
Management Centers: A Cure for Common Traffic Congestion
As a
transportation professional, you may find yourself spending all day
solving transportation problems at work, only to sit in traffic at
the end of the day. If this sounds familiar, you're not alone. Despite
the steps transportation professionals across the country are taking
to reduce
congestion, a recent report by the Texas Transportation
Institute shows that rush hour has grown to nearly 7 hours each day.
People traveling during this peak period spend more than 60 hours
per year stuck in
traffic. All that sitting in traffic adds up to unnecessary air pollution,
increased energy consumption, and wasted
time.
To help
Americans get out of their cars faster and on with their lives, the
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) included congestion mitigation
as one of its three main focus areas for the future. Two strategies
that many State and local agencies are using to reduce congestion
are traffic management centers (TMCs) and interactive
TMC Web sites to alert the public about driving
conditions.
Traffic
management centers function as central collection points for traffic
data, such as accident back-ups, work zone delays, and average travel
speeds. High-tech computers at TMCs receive traffic data from a number
of sources, including closed-circuit television cameras, Web cameras,
weather sensors, ramp meters, and loop detectors. When posted on the
Web or broadcast on radio and television, the data inform road users
about traffic conditions and help drivers plan their travels and choose
alternate routes. Transportation operators
use the data to change traffic signals, reconfigure lanes to minimize
delays, and decide how to
respond most effectively to accidents. Finally, researchers use the
data to study the effectiveness of traffic management
tools and to develop new traffic-control technologies.
TMCs in the United States
The Internet
has become one of the most effective ways
to alert the public quickly about developing news
such as traffic delays and congestion. States can customize their
TMC Web sites to meet specific needs.
In Minnesota's
Twin Cities, commuters can consult detailed congestion maps with incident
icons, find road construction information, listen to traffic radio
reports, and see up-to-the-minute snapshots of area highways on the
State's TMC Web site at www.dot.state.mn.us/tmc/trafficinfo/.
San Diego,
CA, has a similar system providing real-time traveler information
for highways from Oceanside in the north to the U.S.-Mexico border
in the south (www.dot.ca.gov/dist11/d11tmc/sdmap/mapmain.html).
Big cities
are not the only areas with their own TMCs and Web sites. In rural
Pioneer Valley, MA, the Massachusetts Highway Department, the University
of Massachusetts-Amherst (UMass), and the Pioneer Valley Regional
Planning Commission created the Advanced Traveler Management System
to monitor traffic around the Coolidge Bridge Reconstruction Project.
With support from FHWA, these three groups also are establishing the
Regional Traveler Information Center (RTIC) on the UMass campus. They
already sponsor a Web site (www.umass.edu/coolidgeinfo/home.htm)
where drivers can access real-time traffic information. Researchers
at the UMass Transportation Center plan to use the traffic data collected
at the RTIC for future traffic and transportation research projects.
 |
| The
homepage for the San Diego, CA, TMC Web site provides real-time
vehicle speeds for major highways and access roads in southwestern
California. |
TMCs
Overseas
Interactive
TMC Web sites are popping up around the world as well. In Berlin,
Germany, a public-private partnership among the State of Berlin, DaimlerChrysler
Services, and Siemens led to the creation of a TMC known as the VerkehsManagementZentrale
(VMZ). The VMZ Web site (www.vmz-berlin.de/vmz/)
not only displays live traffic information about Berlin's driving
conditions, but also is home to Germany's first intermodal dynamic-route
planning service, which uses a combination of real-time traffic data,
travel times, and transit departure and arrival schedules to determine
what combination of driving and transit will produce the optimal trip
for each traveler using the Web site's service.
In the
future, drivers will be able to access the service through their vehicle's
navigation system or from a Web-enabled cellular phone. The purpose
of the route-planning system is to make the best use of Berlin's existing
transportation infrastructure—a goal very similar to one recently
identified by FHWA in its National Dialogue on Transportation Operations.
FHWA
supports programs that use the Internet and other technologies to
help alleviate congestion—whether by providing the public with
real-time traffic information or by providing transportation professionals
with accurate traffic data to respond to delays or enhance traffic
control research. TMCs and their Web sites offer the promise of helping
FHWA meet its goal of enabling the traveling public to get to and
from work and play with a few less headaches.