- Kansas City Scout
Kansas City Scout is one of the
United States ' largest electronic traffic management systems. It was created in 2000 as part of a bi-state initiative between the Missouri Department of Transportation and the Kansas Department of Transportation to provide this system for theKansas City Metropolitan Area , which is in bothMissouri andKansas (the anchor city ofKansas City, Missouri is in Missouri). The project's cost was $43 million. Of that amount, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) contributed 80-90 percent of the project cost. KDOT and MoDOT shared the remaining cost. The system employs a system of electronic boards placed on major highways throughout the metropolitan area that display traffic information whenever information needs to be displayed (due to an accident, lane closure, highway closure ect), and the system also has cameras on those billboards to automatically detect traffic problems. While the system has extensive coverage of highways in theKansas City Metropolitan Area it still has much more to cover. Since it would be to expensive to cover all the major highways in the Kansas City metro (which has more miles of highway per person than any other metropolitan area in the United States), studies were conducted to determine which highways or segments of highways have priority due to higher accident rates. Since the projects beginning, it has expanded greatly, and will continue to expand. Future plans are to extend coverage toI-635 and coverI-435 even more (especially in the northern areas of the metro) as well as other major city highways. It was named after the iconic Kansas City Scout Statue that exists inPenn Valley Park , overlookingDowntown Kansas City .External links
* http://www.kcscout.net/
* [http://www.cisco.com/web/strategy/docs/trans/kansas_city_scout.pdf Cisco case study on KCScout]
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