Transportation
-
The Hawaii Department of Transportation has launched its Eyes on the Road project, which leverages dashcams in private and state-owned vehicles to gather vast amounts of information on roadway conditions.
-
All e-bikes must be registered and insured, whether they are low-speed e-bikes that require pedaling and can't exceed 20 miles per hour, or they are motorized bicycles that reach 28 miles per hour.
-
A Missouri bill would enable self-driving taxis but it would open roads to autonomous semitrucks, prompting pushback from commercial drivers. Supporters include disability rights advocates.
More Stories
-
Police in Southbridge, Mass., are relying on data gathered by digital warning signs to map out where they need to focus ticketing efforts.
-
Cease and desist notices from city attorneys has temporarily pushed on-demand electric scooter companies Lime and Bird out of the area.
-
A bus-rapid-transit route in the works along Campbellton Road in southwest Atlanta is set to get signal prioritization and other improvements to improve the commute.
-
The decision on the part of city transportation officials means the company will go from a testing ground of just under a square mile to roughly 49 square miles.
-
Sensors and algorithms will soon change the way traffic moves along two of the state’s busy highways in an effort to cut down on congestion.
-
Taxi operators who opt to trade in their gas-powered vehicles for cleaner electric models could receive cash rebates under a new Smart Columbus program.
-
Two St. Louis, Mo., startups showed just how connected vehicles and infrastructure could be put to work for the traveling public.
-
According to one Stanford researcher, the state’s push toward electric vehicles is admirable, but questions remain for utility customers.
-
The 18-month program will use 200 streetlight sensors to study car, foot and bike traffic on three busy city streets.
-
Officials hope that by 2020, there will be 1,800 vehicles owned by the city of Columbus equipped with technology that will connect them to one another and to road and traffic-light sensors.
-
A recent report says that commercial digital signage along state highways could bring millions of dollars to state coffers.
-
The city of Bellevue, Wash., hired a transportation technology partnerships manager to look into whether driverless shuttles could cut down on traffic congestion.
-
Two hundred of the company's new dockless bikes joined the ranks of Lime and Bird in north San Jose earlier this week.
-
Officials hope the rail project will link O’Hare International Airport to the city’s central business district, circumventing traffic and slower trains.
-
The agency signed off on the $32 million purchase of the quieter, cleaner buses June 13.
-
Experts say local governments need to incorporate the self-propelled devices into their overall mobility plans, but there's no blueprint on how best to regulate them.
-
The new system will allow drivers in certain high-use areas to pay at state-of-the-art kiosks that will send text alerts when metered time is expiring.
-
The 2018 Emerging Trends in Parking report by the International Parking Institute points to a growing need to think of parking facilities as more than just places to park cars.
Most Read