Skip to main content

Inrix Analytics announced

Inrix has introduced what it claims is the industry's first cloud-based data analytics services designed to improve how transportation agencies monitor, manage and measure the performance of their road networks. "Now more than ever, government agencies worldwide are being required to stretch and justify every dollar invested in transportation - being asked to do more with less," said Rick Schuman, Inrix VP of public sector.
May 4, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
5367 INRIX has introduced what it claims is the industry’s first cloud-based data analytics services designed to improve how transportation agencies monitor, manage and measure the performance of their road networks. “Now more than ever, government agencies worldwide are being required to stretch and justify every dollar invested in transportation – being asked to do more with less,” said Rick Schuman, Inrix VP of public sector. “Inrix Analytics offers agencies a simple to use, proven tool that improves how they allocate transportation funds and evaluate investments.”

Inrix says its new service helps agencies drive cost out of daily operations, pinpoint areas that most benefit from road and transit improvements and better measure the impact of their investments. For instance, a customisable daily dashboard shows an immediate view of traffic conditions on key bottlenecks and other pain points highlighting duration of delay for each slowdown in comparison to free flow and expected travel times.  Inrix Analytics seamlessly integrates agency sensor, incident and work zone data with information from the company’s crowd-sourced smart driver network, covering more than two million roadway miles and interchanges, enabling agencies to gain insight into conditions in areas previously blind to operations. improving public safety and reducing incident delay costs.

Thus, through a more thorough and complete view of the road network by segment, by day, by hour, agencies can identify the severity of traffic at various chokepoints with much greater precision.  By pinpointing areas that offer maximum benefit from improvements, agencies can invest limited transportation dollars with greater confidence.

Inrix says it will begin offering the service starting in North America in January 2012 and to agencies in markets worldwide by the end of the year.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • CityStream goes on stream for US authorities
    September 1, 2021
    Nexar’s CityStream platform allows road agencies to see the layout of work zones any time.
  • Free flow tolling technology is booming
    April 10, 2013
    Jon Masters reports on the latest moves in the free-flow tolling segment. Free-flow tolling of roads and discrete infrastructure, such as bridges and tunnels, is an area of transportation that appears to be booming. Tolling in general is on the up, often still as a means for funding road projects where public sector budgets can no longer cover the necessary costs, but not exclusively so. Several high profile examples of road user charging for ‘demand management’ – the reduction of congestion as part of a wi
  • Work zone safety solution on busy world highways
    December 3, 2013
    Globally renowned highway work zone safety solution manufacturers have been providing some of their latest systems to protect roadworkers and motorists on high volume traffic highways. Guy Woodford reports Versilis has provided one of its state-of-the-art work zone safety solutions during the rehabilitation of North America’s busiest highway. The Canadian road safety product innovator and manufacturer was retained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO) to install automated traffic control
  • Frost Control gets the picture
    April 1, 2021
    Frost Control Systems says it has added cameras to its sensor-based fixed road weather information system (RWIS) for improved information accuracy.