STREAMS Integrated Intelligent Transport System
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STREAMS Integrated Intelligent Transport System is an enterprise traffic management system designed to operate in the Microsoft Windows environment. Like most traffic management systems, STREAMS is an array of institutional, human, hardware, and software components designed to monitor, control, and manage traffic on streets and highways. Advanced traffic management systems come under the banner of ITS (intelligent transport systems). ITS is the application of information and communications technology to transport operations in order to "reduce operating costs",[1] "improve safety" and "maximize the capacity of existing infrastructure". STREAMS provides traffic signal management, incident management, motorway management, vehicle priority,[2] traveler information, flood monitoring [3] and parking guidance within a single integrated system[4] is what the product says. STREAMS is developed by Transmax.
History
[edit]In 1969, the Department of Main Roads (Queensland) installed the first Intelligent Transport System in Australia (located at Surfers Paradise).[citation needed]
In 1985, a second-generation traffic management system was installed in Cairns, Australia. This was known as the TRAC System, or Traffic Responsive Adaptive Control System. Progressive installation of the TRAC system followed at several more sites around Queensland including the capital city, Brisbane.[citation needed]
In 1988, a traffic management system was installed for the South East Freeway in Brisbane, Australia. The features included were ramp metering and graphical displays of traffic conditions. It also provided automatic incident detection.[citation needed]
In 1992, a new integrated intelligent transport system development was commenced. The objectives were to lower ongoing costs while providing increased performance and opportunity for future ITS applications. The resulting system was STREAMS.[citation needed]
In 2002, the division of Department of Main Roads (Queensland) responsible for continuing development of STREAMS was privatized to form Transmax. The company remains 100% owned by the Queensland Government Department of Transport and Main Roads.[citation needed]
In April 2007, Transmax in partnership with VicRoads implemented a coordinated ramp metering trial in Melbourne, Victoria on a 15 km section of the Monash Freeway.[5] Later that year, in December, VicRoads installed STREAMS to manage another six ramps.[6]
These developments were part of a much larger M1 Upgrade Project that continued over the next three years, eventually winning the 2010 National ITS Australia Award. The project to upgrade the 75-kilometre M1 Freeway, increased the capacity and safety of the Monash Freeway, the CityLink Tollway (Southern Link) and the West Gate Freeway utilising STREAMS as the Integrated Control System.[7]
In 2016, Transmax partnered with Parsons Brinckerhoff to trial STREAMS motorway management functionality for the Utah Department of Transportation in the United States.[8]
Software Architecture
[edit]STREAMS employs a distributed computing software architecture.[9] Field hardware such as intersection controllers, video cameras and speed detectors are connected via field processors back to a central application server. Users connect to the application server via the workstation software. Field communications are via Optical Fibre, DSL, or Wireless connections.[citation needed]
The software is built in distinct modules for each distinct area of traffic / transport control and monitoring. The workstation software communicates to the application server software via a publisher / subscriber model (i.e. workstations subscribe to specifically requested streams of data which are published by the application server).[citation needed]
The software architecture model is designed to support the software's claim of being an "integrated" Advanced Traffic Management System.[10]
The transport network data is set up via a GIS (Geographic Information System). The GIS allows for a graphical user interface displaying transport network data overlaid on street maps and updating in real-time. [citation needed]
Adaptive Traffic Management
[edit]STREAMS implements adaptive traffic management through a feature called "Dynamic Plan Selection".[1] Depending on the density of traffic (occupancy) and the dominant direction of traffic (for example, inbound, outbound, or bidirectional) on a road, nearby signalized intersections are operated using several predefined traffic plans. A user sets up the signal timing and picks the traffic density levels and direction that they apply to. Selecting the appropriate signal timing is then automatic. When a time-based traffic plan schedule would be inappropriate because of varying traffic levels, STREAMS Dynamic Plan Selection can adapt to unexpected traffic levels as they arise.[citation needed]
With help from the academic community, STREAMS Smart Motorways offers the coordinated ramp-metering algorithm suite ALINEA/HERO.[11] The modular architecture of STREAMS allows Transmax to integrate new algorithms as they become available. STREAMS applies the computed metering rates using ramp signal controllers deployed at the roadside. Controlling multiple consecutive ramps, ideally the whole motorway, makes it possible to maintain a more consistent motorway flow and prevent flow breakdown. Using HERO, STREAMS is able to balance queues across multiple ramps and maximize motorway performance.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]- Traffic Management System
- Intelligent Transport Systems
- SCATS
- BLISS
- Geographic Information System
- ITS Australia
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Using ICT to Improve Traffic Management". Archived from the original on 2016-11-17. Retrieved 2017-03-14.
- ^ "Queensland trials intelligent traffic lights".
- ^ https://s.campbellsci.com/documents/au/technical-papers/road_flood_monitoring_systems.pdf/ [dead link]
- ^ "Improved travel time reliability for Sandgate Road and Mains Road traffic", Queensland Department of Main Roads Statement, 21 September 2008, archived from the original on 22 October 2010, retrieved 7 April 2010
- ^ "ITS | Benefits: Deployment of integrated traffic management and control system leads to a greater than 25 percent increase in peak throughput capacity on Melbourne, Australia's M1 Monash Freeway". www.itscosts.its.dot.gov.
- ^ "On-ramp to success", Traffic Technology International, October–November 2009
- ^ Melbourne's M1 freeway upgrade and SUNA Traffic Channel win ITS Australia Awards
- ^ "USA to trial Qld congestion-busting technology". August 9, 2016.
- ^ http://www.transportationgroup.nz/papers/2007/A4a_Verma.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "Schematics in the media". Archived from the original on 2017-03-15. Retrieved 2017-03-14.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-15. Retrieved 2017-03-14.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Further reading
[edit]- "Award for EVP Technology" ITS International, August 2013
- "Melbourne installs smart road technology" ITS Australia, July 2013
- "2013 iAwards Winners" ICT, June 2013
- "Emergency responders get the green light at awards" Queensland Government Department of Transport and Main Roads, June 2013
- "APICTA 2011 Winner" Asia Pacific ICT Alliance Awards, November 2011.
- "Queensland ICT companies scoop up international awards" Government Services, Building Industry and ICT, November 2011.
- "2011 National and State iAwards Winners" 2011 iAwards, August 2011.
- "TRL expands its Traffic Management Solution with STREAMS" Archived 2013-05-05 at archive.today TRL, May 2011.
- "Smart roads set to get smarter?" ZDNet, September 2010.
- "Reducing Congestion on the M1 Goes Hi-Tech"[permanent dead link] Victorian Department of Roads and Ports, November 2008.
- "New Technology to Cut Freeway Congestion" Archived 2012-03-26 at the Wayback Machine Transport Futures Institute, November 2008.
- "Green lights all the way for emergency vehicles during trial" Archived 2010-10-22 at the Wayback Machine Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, September 2008.
- "Traffic management nerve centre part of congestion-busting focus" Archived 2009-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, September 2008.
- "Synchronisation of Brisbane’s traffic lights part of efforts to cut congestion" Archived 2009-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, July 2008.
- "Record spending to maintain Queensland’s roads" Archived 2009-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, June 2008.
- "Congestion busters for Sunshine Coast" Archived 2009-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads, July 2007.