Skip to main content

California traffic management system using simulation has successful trial

A complex online modelling system for integrating traffic management on the southern Californian road system has successfully completed a major operational trial this spring The "decision support system" uses the collection of data about the local interstate I-15 and many of the roads which feed into it or lead away from it, to build a comprehensive picture of traffic flows, working with a variety of city agencies, federal highway administration and services such as police and crash data. Data from e
May 16, 2014 Read time: 3 mins

A complex online modelling system for integrating traffic management on the southern Californian road system has successfully completed a major operational trial this spring

The "decision support system" uses the collection of data about the local interstate I-15 and many of the roads which feed into it or lead away from it, to build a comprehensive picture of traffic flows, working with a variety of city agencies, 2410 Federal Highway Administration and services such as police and crash data.

Data from existing road traffic flow tools and detectors, video, ramp metering, officer reports and other current sources, is analysed for a live computer model. This is combined partly with predictive modelling software, based on microsimulation, to assess congestion build-up in the very near future, perhaps 30 minutes, or "near real-time".

154 Aimsun Online software from Spanish firm TSP is embedded with the overall package to provide near future simulations to predict decision impacts on flows.

A coordinated response by associate agencies to accidents, excessive traffic flow, or major traffic affecting events such as  stadium matches or concerts, can be made more easily using the system. Part of the set-up of the system has been to bring the disparate agencies and government bodies together to work on agreed scenarios to solve problems, rather than seeing only their own particular issues and solutions.

The system, now being applied on the main corridor feeding San Diego and several nearby towns, is a federal level trial being developed by the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG). This body contracted 2698 Delcan Corporation as systems integrator for real-time modelling. It was described in 3260 World Highways software supplement in 2012.

In a statement the SANDAG body says it has "just completed a successful 'coordinated test plan’ with all members of the Interstate 15 integrated corridor management project team. All of the agency partners involved in the project came together to witness the first ever “fully automated” multimodal corridor handling of a freeway incident in the US. The traffic management decision was successfully made entirely based on automatically triggered real-time simulations of the entire multimodal transportation network."

The decision support system being developed here is part of a national initiative begun in 2006 by the 2364 US Department of Transportation called Integrated Corridor Management, ICM, to tackle gridlock and congestion in urban areas.

Following the success of the I-15 testing, the Federal Highways Administration is evaluating new sites and corridors for further sponsored implementations of ICM in the US.

Aimsun commented that its simulation program architecture being incorporated into the system "ensures that what is being simulated reflects the actual state of the network while also providing scalability and quick response times."

Related Content

  • Flatiron wins Winnipeg interchange project in Canada
    August 5, 2015
    US-based contractor Flatiron has won a US$157 million design and build contract for an interchange in the Canadian city of Winnipeg, in the province of Manitoba. The project, for owner Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation, will replace the existing loop-ramp interchange for Provincial Trunk Highways 59 and 101. Work includes seven precast girder bridges between 40m and 100 meters in length, one cast-in-place box culvert through-pass, construction of 1.5 million cubic meters of interchange embank
  • Morocco’s minister for Equipment and Transport discusses the IRF Marrakech conference
    April 3, 2013
    The magic of Morocco will form an idyllic backdrop for one of the landmark events on this year’s IRF calendar: the major regional conference focusing on North Africa & the Mediterranean which is being hosted in Marrakech on 19-20 March. Abdelaziz Rabbah, the Moroccan minister of Equipment & Transport will set the tone by welcoming delegates to a special high-level segment, which will open the event in the presence of dignitaries and senior officials drawn from throughout the region. This will include keynot
  • IRF-SATC webinar addresses the impact of Covid-19 on freight and logistics sectors
    October 22, 2020
    A wind of trade protectionism referred to as “Covid nationalism” has started blowing on global trade markets in the wake of the coronavirus pandemics. Countries are now implementing border restrictions in an attempt to control the spread of the virus.
  • XAIS to develop lifecycle modelling tool
    February 10, 2022
    Stochastic deterioration modelling will be the foundation of the programme being developed with the University of Nottingham for highway maintenance predictions where there a lack of historic road condition data.