Skip to main content

ARTBA video contest winners announced

Students from the US states of Pennsylvania and Georgia have earned top honours in the annual ARTBA Student Transportation Video Contest.
By David Arminas September 11, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The Hyde Street cable car in San Francisco, California (image © Lunamarina/Dreamstime)

A Pennsylvania university student and an 11th-grader in Georgia are winners of the 12th annual American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s “Student Transportation Video Contest.”

Sponsored by the Research & Education Division of ARTBA, the competition challenges students to develop a brief video exploring a topic related to the nation’s transportation network. Students from across the US submitted videos. Winners were selected by a panel of ARTBA members. Each winner receives $500.

The winning videos were shown at ARTBA’s national convention in La Jolla, California, earlier this month.

In the Elementary, Middle or High School Students category, the winning video was “Public Transportation Effects on Society”. In the video, Cindy Le, an 11th -grader at Dekalb Early College Academy in Stone Mountain, Georgia, explores the global benefits to economies, the environment and societies by widely deploying mass transit systems.
 
In the Post-Secondary/College/Graduate Level category, the winning video was “Drive Right; Simulator for Safe Autonomous Driving”. Xiatao Sun, a robotics major at the University of Pennsylvania, explores how virtual reality technology can help simulate both manual and autonomous driving at the driver’s discretion. The video simulates the experience of driving on rural and city roads as well as highways.  

ARTBA, established in 1902, is the voice of the US transportation design and construction industry and represents the sector’s interests before Congress, federal agencies, the White House, news media and the general public. 

Related Content

  • IRF World Congress: Safety through technology
    October 17, 2024
    For too long there has been a focus on physical infrastructure itself when it comes to sustainability. Now we understand the interdependence of infrastructure, government agencies and policies, a nation’s health, access to education and much more. David Arminas reports from Istanbul, Turkiye.
  • The US FAST Act: a job left unfinished
    April 4, 2016
    US roads and bridges are crumbling at an alarming rate as state governments wring their hands over the increasingly scarce money for repairs. Enter the FAST Act. But is it enough? US state transportation department officials, as well as highway contractors and operators, breathed a sigh of relief in December. For months the highways infrastructure sector waited anxiously to see where the necessary money for road projects would come from. For several years, the Highways Trust Fund – the usual way of paying f
  • Call for papers for 22nd ITS America annual meeting
    April 25, 2012
    ITS America has announced it is now accepting submissions for papers and presentations for consideration for its 22nd Annual Meeting & Exposition, “Smart Transportation: A Future We Can Afford.” The three-day event will be held from 21-23, May, 2012, at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, MD, just outside Washington, DC.
  • McCain takes on the SWARCO name
    August 22, 2022
    It was in 2016 when US-based ITS supplier McCain became a part of the SWARCO family.