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

  • Trial of innovative real-time alerts for wildlife on highways
    May 2, 2012
    The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) is testing a first-in-the-USA detection system that alerts drivers in real time of wildlife on highways that cause risk to motorists. The OmniTrax solution from Senstar is based on a volumetric electromagnetic proven sensor, buried approximately one third of a metre underground and about 10 metres from either side of the roadway.
  • The era of workzone data
    July 4, 2018
    Portable work zone messaging is now integral - not an add-on - when it comes to safety on large-scale highway projects. Andrew Williams* reports. Portable work zone ITS solutions have emerged in recent years as important flexible tools for managing major roadwork projects, from new-build to upgrades. They effectively ensure traffic disruption is kept to a minimum and lives can be saved. As such, the technology forms a central component of a major €1.7 billion project in the southern English county of Cambr
  • Versatile traffic camera to boost safety
    August 14, 2017
    Siqura is offering the TrafficPTZ Ultimo, a Pan Tilt Zoom camera that is said to be optimised to meet traffic and infrastructure demands. A nove feature is the embedded processing, which allows third party application software such as analytics to run on it. The unit is claimed to be an all-IP camera with a robust design that features fast and accurate positioning. It also has no backlash, a large zoom lens and is easy to install. The camera responds automatically to information from roadside sensors such a
  • Work zone safety with SRL's REMOS
    August 11, 2025
    REMOS allows one person off-site to manage several sites simultaneously, efficiently making interventions to prevent and eliminate bottlenecks.