Connect with us

Automotive

A history of roads in Virginia: Intelligent technologies applied to highways

Published

on

Virginia’s Smart Road in Montgomery County tests vehicles and vehicle systems under varied conditions, including rain and snow, which can be produced by the devices shown here.

The growing numbers of vehicles using the highways in the 1990s demanded more efficiencies in the operation of those highways. Early in the decade, VDOT engineers worked with national committees to evaluate the potential benefits of what became known as “intelligent transportation systems”—a whole new array of technologies being applied to roadways, vehicles, and traffic management. Often these systems were adapted from technologies developed earlier by the defense industry. Upon being named commissioner in 1994, David R. Gehr, a veteran VDOT engineer and administrator, secured a position for the agency as a national leader in implementing these new systems.

In 1998, under Gehr’s leadership, the department consolidated these evolving technologies across Virginia under a program called “Smart Travel.” The program included regional Smart Traffic Centers to help manage traffic and incidents; traffic signals coordinated by computers; Internet pictures of traffic conditions; a statewide Transportation Emergency Operations Center in Richmond; toll booths that automatically deduct tolls from motorists’ accounts; and truck weigh stations that check truckers’ registrations and weight data without stopping their trucks.

In a special effort that showed Virginia’s determination to make full use of technology, a “Smart Road,” the first roadbed in the nation built specifically to test intelligent transportation systems, was constructed by VDOT and Virginia Tech. It was designed as part of a new highway between Blacksburg and I-81.

By 1990, computers linked VDOT employees throughout the state and, by the end of the decade, engineers in several locations were working simultaneously on the same road design plans, via computer, without shipping cumbersome blueprints back and forth. As the decade progressed, solar power was weighing and classifying vehicles as they crossed pavement sensors—and there was much more. Surface condition analyzers (SCAN) were recording roadway temperatures, moisture, and salinity to give road crews critical information for timing their application of chemicals
to pavements during winter storms. Management information systems were keeping vast data on highways, bridges, signals, and signs in order to engineer safer roadways and maintain them more efficiently. Also, highway contractors were accessing project advertising schedules and viewing awards for highway contracts via the Internet.

These efficiencies were needed more than before after the department lost 927 senior employees through an early retirement option in 1991 during Gov. Wilder’s administration and when another 1,227 employees left in 1995 through a retirement option offered by Gov. George Allen. Both events thinned VDOT’s senior employee ranks and dropped full-time employee strength to about 9,700, the lowest since 1986.

Those losses forced increasing reliance by the department on consultants and contractors to do work traditionally performed by VDOT employees, and that “outsourcing” became a continuing trend. It closely resembled another trend gaining momentum throughout the commonwealth and the nation — “privatization.”

 

Front Royal, VA
39°
Clear
7:15 am7:24 pm EDT
Feels like: 36°F
Wind: 3mph SSE
Humidity: 79%
Pressure: 30.11"Hg
UV index: 0
SatSunMon
70°F / 46°F
86°F / 59°F
63°F / 32°F
Obituaries14 hours ago

Charles Michael “Rusty” “Chuck” Fischbein (1944 – 2026)

Obituaries14 hours ago

Jerrold E. “Jerry” Groves (1931 – 2026)

Local Government14 hours ago

Town Planning Commission Moves Forward with Industrial Zoning, Holds Preliminary Discussion of Urban Agriculture

Local Government17 hours ago

Schools Push for Budget Flexibility, Consistent Funding as Needs Grow

Local Government18 hours ago

Skyline High Teams, Athletes Successful Seasons and Performances Acknowledged – Oh, and Those Roosters

Local Government20 hours ago

School Board Seeks to Restore Meals Tax Funding for School Facilities

Interesting Things to Know22 hours ago

Wasting Drinking Water: 3 Habits to Eliminate From Your Daily Routine

Health23 hours ago

Medicare Launches TEAM Program to Improve Recovery After Surgery

Local News23 hours ago

Izaak Walton League Promotes Conservation and Outdoor Programs at Community Forum

report logo
Arrest Logs2 days ago

POLICE: 7 Day FRPD Arrest Report 3/16/2026

Local News2 days ago

Blue Ridge Wildlife Center Patient of the Week: Great Horned Owl

Aboard SPIRIT AIRLINE Flight 410 en route BWI at Hollywood / Fort Lauderdale International Airport in Florida FL on Wednesday morning, 18 June 2014 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Travel2 days ago

Airline CEOs Warn of Travel Strain Amid DHS Funding Uncertainty

Obituaries2 days ago

Robert B. Walters (1931 – 2026)

Business Spotlight2 days ago

Lemmon & Hale Highlight Importance of Estate Planning for Families and Businesses

Local News2 days ago

Hike Kidz Foundation Highlights Programs for Families in Need

Local News2 days ago

Phoenix Project Offers Support and Resources for Victims of Abuse

State News2 days ago

Virginia Moves to Launch Legal Cannabis Marketplace After Years of Delay

State News2 days ago

As Spanberger Reviews State-Level ‘Momnibus’ Bills, Kaine and Booker Try Again on a Federal Package

Health2 days ago

Detox Diets: Don’t Overlook the Risks

Job Market2 days ago

How to Answer the Interview Question: “Where Do You See Yourself in Five Years?”

Local News2 days ago

HARTS, DSS & House of Hope Highlight Services at Community Forum

Obituaries3 days ago

Joyce Henry Sutherland (1942 – 2026)

Local News3 days ago

Commentary: Building on What We Have – A Proposed Economic Development Agenda for Warren County

Obituaries3 days ago

Jamie Christopher Tewalt (1971 – 2026)

Obituaries3 days ago

George Jules Pouzenc III (1958 – 2026)