SOME PROMISING NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR SMART MOBILITY AND SMART CITIES

Sponsored by
University of California Center on Economic Competitiveness in Transportation
Time
04/05/2016 4:30 PM
Location
McDonnell Douglas Engineering Auditorium
Chris Hendrickson
Chris Hendrickson
Professor
Carnegie Mellon University
Abstract

A variety of new technologies for infrastructure management are now reaching implementation stages. These new technologies will profoundly affect the management and performance of transportation and other metropolitan systems. Carnegie Mellon University initiated the inter-disciplinary Traffic21 Institute to deploy new transportation technologies in partnership with corporations and government agencies throughout Pennsylvania. A companion initiative, Metro21, is expanding this effort to include other metropolitan services. In this presentation, a variety of Traffic21 technologies will be presented, focusing on new technologies and implementation issues.

Chris Hendrickson is the Hamerschlag University Professor, Director of the Traffic21 Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, member of the National Academy of Engineering and Editor-in-Chief of the ASCE Journal of Transportation Engineering. His research, teaching and consulting are in the general area of engineering planning and management, including design for the environment, system performance, construction project management, finance and computer applications. He has co-authored seven books and published numerous articles in the professional literature. His education includes BS and MS degrees from Stanford University, a Philosophy degree in economics from Oxford University, and a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.