Skip to main content

The right way in Arizona

The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADoT) has selected Teledyne Flir to help stop an increase in accidents and fatalities caused by wrong-way drivers on freeways.
August 15, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The US state’s new wrong-way detection system is based on Flir's Cameleon ITS and TrafiSense video-analytic thermal cameras

The new wrong-way detection system, based on Flir's Cameleon ITS and TrafiSense video-analytic thermal cameras, is being operated on a 24km corridor in the city of Phoenix on I-17 between I-10 and Loop 101.

ADoT has also adopted the wrong-way detection technology as part of its standard ITS cabinet design. The agency says that this is the first such system to go beyond detection; it also automates countermeasures to protect oncoming traffic.

The agency says current practices typically rely on drivers calling 911, often with inaccurate location information.

Following field tests, ADoT believes that thermal video analytics sensors are the most effective technology for detecting wrong-way drivers, compared to loops, visible-spectrum analytics and radar.

In addition to incident detection, the system includes flashing wrong-way signs, public warnings via dynamic message sign messages to oncoming drivers, ramp closures and traffic signal pre-empts. There are also alerts to police and other agencies, including arrival times at intercept points.

When a vehicle passes through the detection zone of a Flir TrafiSense camera, video analytics determine its direction and speed. Wrong-way events are confirmed by Cameleon - first by an operator using Cameleon’s automated video call-up and then by a fully-automated confirmation by Cameleon when an adjacent detection occurs.

The countermeasures - such as warning lights - are then deployed by Flir's system.

Cameleon sounds an audible alarm and displays looping and live video of the event on all operator workstations and on the video wall in the traffic operations centre.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Safer cone collection with X-Cone among the latest safety innovations
    August 30, 2017
    X-Cone is a new traffic cone management system offering a higher level of safety for workers and maximum efficiency for contractors. Austrian-made X-Cone is a truck-mounted system that can manage the setting out and collection of cones from the flatbed of any 3.5tonne vehicle. It does not matter if the cones are straight or laying on the road, the X-cone can still manage the work quickly, safely and reliably, according to the manufacturer. For setting out standard cones, the driver can decide the distance b
  • SmartDrive testing safer signalised intersections for emergency responders
    May 15, 2012
    While both the police and firefighting are recognised as occupations that carry dangers, nearly 13 per cent of the firefighters and police officers who die in the line of duty are killed in vehicle-related incidents, while fire trucks are involved in ten times as many collisions as other heavy trucks.
  • Reducing asphalt plant downtime
    December 12, 2018
    How asphalt plant control add-ons make operation easier while reducing costly downtime - *Carlos Cardenas The word downtime might as well be a curse word in the asphalt production industry. As any operator will say, unplanned plant shutdowns can end up costing a producer heavily in lost production, not to mention a line of unhappy truck drivers and asphalt customers. The key is to get ahead of the problem and spot issues before they skyrocket in severity. Fortunately, some asphalt plant manufacturers offe
  • Permanent DMS in work zones
    February 9, 2012
    Forty-four state agencies currently rely on Daktronics for a total of more than 3,500 dynamic message signs (DMS) to provide important information to motorists. As soon as a new construction project begins, approaching motorists need to know exactly what to expect. Permanent DMS provide the information ahead of time, ahead of the congestion.