Philadelphia is the only major U.S. city that doesn’t have a
traffic operations center. In fall 2014, that will change.
For the past five years, the city has been working on a $3.4
million traffic operations center that will allow the city to manage traffic.
The hope, said the city’s chief traffic and street
lighting engineer Richard
Montanez, is that the center will reduce traffic, as well as
help SEPTA
move faster through city streets. There’s no other way to deal with the city’s
traffic, he said. “We can’t build more roads,” Montanez said. “We can’t build
our way out of congestion.”
According to project lead Montanez, the center, which will
be in the Juniata Park section of North Philly, will be able to:
control about one-third of the city’s 3,000 traffic lights.
It won’t be able to control all of them because two-thirds of the traffic
lights are not computerized and cannot be controlled remotely. The city is
working on upgrading these traffic lights as part of a $90 million, three-year project that
began in 2012. Imagine the efficiency possibilities of being able to control
traffic patterns through stop lights.
monitor traffic patterns using cameras that will be
installed throughout the city. Right now, there are 12 cameras in Southeast
Center City that the city uses to monitor traffic patterns, but they are only
monitored about four hours a day, Montanez said. The city plans to install 50
more cameras in high traffic areas and monitor them from the center 24/7. PennDOT is also installing
39 cameras on I-95 to monitor traffic. The city will use this information about
traffic patterns to guide how the traffic lights are timed.
Source: Technically
Philly
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