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Transportation Technology

Colorado Prepares To Install 'Smart Road' Product By Integrated Roadways (ieee.org) 62

Wave723 shares a report from IEEE Spectrum: On August 30, a startup plans to add its "smart pavement" to an intersection in an industrial corner of Denver, Colorado. The company has encased assorted electronics within four slabs of concrete and will wedge those slabs into the road between a Pepsi Co. bottling plant and two parking lots. Integrated Roadways says its product, which can deduce the speed, weight, and direction of a vehicle from the basket of sensors buried in the pavement, will face its first real-world test at that discreet Denver junction. If this trial goes well, the startup "will replace 500 meters of pavement along a dangerous curve in Highway 285, just south of Denver, with its product in early 2019," reports IEEE Spectrum. The sensors will be able to detect when a driver careens off the road's edge and alert authorities. It even has the ability to prompt officials to reconfigure lanes to relieve congestion.
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Colorado Prepares To Install 'Smart Road' Product By Integrated Roadways

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  • I have to agree I see some value in some sections of roads where more accidents occur being able to alert authorities there's a problem - that could save response time.

    I wonder how much quicker it would really be, since mostly people would dial 911 right away - but it would probably shorten the time it took to know exactly where an accident was.

    I've driven on the part of 285 mentioned pretty often, what would really be better is if they widened lanes a bit more at each curve. That section has kind

  • If you want to make a true road innovation, do it without concrete. We are running out of sand to make the material (desert sand is unusable unfortunately), and it does not ages very well beyond 50 years.
    • Keep in mind: All of our modern problems can be solved or significantly mitigated by mandatory population reduction...including this one.
  • I can just imagine them getting some strange data [youtube.com].

  • They are touting this as "for safety" I'll bet. But, once they work out the bugs, look for mandated NFC, bluetooth or some other ID device on EVERY vehicle. If it can detect the vehicle speed, just think of the unlimited revenue stream for speeding vehicles. Or, detecting if a vehicle license plate/registration/driver license is expired. Oh just think of the possibilities. Sniffers to detect pollution, someone talking on the phone, eating a hamburger, all sorts of thinks government could use to bilk consu
  • A local firm, International Road Dynamics, has been manufacturing and selling a product that does exactly the same things as this product does, for 35 years.

    https://www.irdinc.com/ [irdinc.com]

  • How will they use the data when they find that 95% of traffic on a given road segment exceeds the speed limit? Will they use it for revenue enhancement? Or will they use it to implement the 85% rule [mikeontraffic.com]?

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