An upgrade that would link and coordinate all of Oklahoma City’s traffic lights to cut down on commute times has fallen behind schedule, but will begin this summer, city officials said.
Staff members had originally hoped to have the project done by the end of 2009. Public Works Director Dennis Clowers said putting together a plan and soliciting proposals from contractors who could implement the project has been far more complicated than expected.
"We were a little premature with that time frame,” Clowers said. "It has taken us significantly longer to get to this stage.”
The system will link traffic lights through a citywide wireless Internet network. The network was installed years ago for use by police and firefighters.
"It will be the largest Wi-Fi implementation of this type in the world,” Clowers said. "It will involve all 700-plus traffic signals in the city.”
Other cities have linked a couple of dozen lights, but nothing approaching the scale of Oklahoma City’s plan.
City Manager Jim Couch said the public safety Wi-Fi network is the key to the project. Few cities have a similar network in place.
"We didn’t have to duplicate those communication costs,” Couch said.
Clowers compared it to an air traffic control system at an airport.
All lights will send information to a central hub, which will coordinate the lights to give motorists more green lights and shorter wait times when they do hit a red light.
City officials estimate motorists will see 5 percent fewer red lights and 5 percent shorter wait times at red lights once the upgrade is finished.
"It will also allow for automatic error reporting,” Clowers said. "We can bring up any individual intersection at the central headquarters and see exactly how that intersection is functioning at any time.”
Money for the project comes from the last voter-approved general obligation bond issue. Clowers said he won’t know the exact cost for the upgrade until a contract is awarded, but he expects it could cost between $8 million and $10 million.
The city sent out a request for proposals from contractors in December. Four companies responded. The city finished interviewing those contractors Thursday.
"We will select one, two, three or possibly all four to do an installation on selected corridors in April or May then have demonstrations in June and award a contract in August,” Clowers said. "The installation will be made over a three-year period.”
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