FutureStructure Transportation
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Each winning city will receive an individualized Readiness Workshop and host of tech tools to help further its efforts toward becoming a smart city.
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Some 1,500 intersections in Los Angeles to get upgraded with new traffic signal equipment.
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The Boring Company will construct a four-mile tunnel to connect a rail station with Ontario International Airport in the Los Angeles region. The tunnel will accommodate zero-emission and possibly autonomous vehicles.
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The new products are not yet available on the market, but are slated for production in 2019 and 2020.
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An eHighway test site in California has electric-hybrid trucks connecting to overhead power lines.
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San Diego will spend up to $5.7 million over five years to help New York-based The Free Ride put more all-electric shuttles on downtown streets.
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Board of Selectmen chair Joseph Curro believes that as a community, they have to be ready for these advancing technologies, including autonomous vehicles.
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Civic innovation leaders discussed how to work technology into the nation's new and existing physical infrastructure during the Digitizing Infrastructure: Building a Smart Future symposium in Washington, D.C., Nov. 14.
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Uber might return to the Oregon city after a look at potential city policy and a number of driver requirement changes.
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Other states have invited self-driving testing, while California seemed stuck on the regulatory details. The competition seems to have rekindled efforts to move state policy along.
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A Los Angeles-based startup plans on testing a high-speed transportation option, similar to Hyperloop One, in the state.
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The move is part of the company’s partnership with the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority to reduce greenhouse gases.
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The massive amount of data collected by the company is giving local governments a new tool to examine the traffic flowing through their jurisdictions.
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As the technology develops, so does debate about what it will mean for professional drivers.
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Overall transit ridership in the United States has been in decline since 2014, due in large part to falling gas prices. But the increased use of ride-hailing apps, like Uber and Lyft, is also playing a part.
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The company announced that the region will be one of the first served by UberAir.
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The Alphabet subsidiary has been testing the technology without the use of a safety driver in Chandler, Ariz., since mid-October.
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A mix between a ride share and a bus, West Sacramento is testing a new program to supplement traditional public transit.
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A 12-month pilot is scheduled to launch on city roads Nov. 8.
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Rep. Lydia Blume argues that Maine Turnpike Authority toll plazas should be updated to keep the infrastructure from becoming obsolete in the future.
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Can solar roadways overcome past struggles to provide positive change for a more eco-friendly infrastructure?
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