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A&M System to donate $1 million to College Station traffic fixes

June 26, 2015
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The City of College Station and Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) on Friday announced a partnership to tackle the problem of burgeoning traffic in the rapidly growing Bryan-College Station area.

The Texas A&M University System will donate $1 million to the City to help upgrade traffic signals, control mechanisms and monitoring technologies, thereby making traffic flow more manageable and responses to traffic disturbances more efficient.

“It’s rare that somebody approaches the City and says, ‘Hey, you got a use for a million dollars?’ So the person I have to thank first is Chancellor Sharp,” College Station City Manager Kelly Templin said. “He was very quick to offer these funds. We have been working very closely with the Texas A&M Transportation Institute on the implementation of a game day program … that has been refined to get traffic to and from the stadium.”

Yet, Templin and TTI officials are adamant the changes will bring significant positive impact to College Station’s traffic issue year-round — not merely on game days.

Included in the plans are new signal controllers (already installed), new communication equipment between TTI and the City, closed-circuit cameras for the City’s traffic monitoring systems that will sync with TTI’s and roadway sensors to monitor traffic flow and density.

So now we’ve got a system that can find problems faster, react to them faster and have a better plan to tell everyone about it. I liken it to a great linebacker — we can see it and react to it more quickly. - Tim Lomax {"Module":"quote","Alignment":"left","Quote":"So now we’ve got a system that can find problems faster, react to them faster and have a better plan to tell everyone about it. I liken it to a great linebacker — we can see it and react to it more quickly.","Author":"Tim Lomax"}
“Now we can go in and, if there’s a problem, they can change the signals and have a different kind of plan in half an hour or less,” TTI’s Tim Lomax said. “We can react much faster to problems. We can also find those problems much faster because of the closed-circuit cameras they’re putting out. That all will sync up with what A&M Transportation Services has in their monitoring system. So now those two agencies can talk to each other.

“So now we’ve got a system that can find problems faster, react to them faster and have a better plan to tell everyone about it. I liken it to a great linebacker — we can see it and react to it more quickly.”

Traffic in College Station on game days and otherwise has become a central issue with the once-tiny college town’s growth into a city of more than 100,000, the steady increase in Texas A&M's student population, the rise to prominence of the Aggie football program and the expansion of Kyle Field.

“We’re not a small town anymore,” TTI Director Dennis Christiansen said. “We’ve become a city, and on occasion we experience the traffic that comes with that. The traffic on game day makes College station the fourth-largest downtown in the state of Texas, and they all want to leave at the same time. We’ve made huge progress in making it happen.

“The equipment going in as part of this upgrade is a huge step in being able to [time traffic signals] well, and do it efficiently.”

The new communication equipment between the transportation management center and the city is expected to be in place by summer’s end. Lomax indicated that they expect to be able to control signals from the City, the East Kyle Command Center and the Transportation Services offices by the fall.

Also, the ability to turn Wellborn Road southbound across four lanes when directing traffic after a game would be aided by overhead signage, installation of which is anticipated to begin after football season and be completed next year.

“In terms of benefit, I think we’re talking about, in a 10-minute trip, getting home a minute or two faster,” Lomax said. “The real benefit is going to be more predictable travel times and less frustration.

“I don’t know of any town this size that has a traffic management center like what they’re (the City of College Station) going to have.”
Discussion from...

A&M System to donate $1 million to College Station traffic fixes

8,835 Views | 10 Replies | Last: 8 yr ago by Definitely Not A Cop
Beau Holder
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AG
A&M System to donate $1 million to College Station traffic fixes
FroggieBreath
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The CS police are like vultures issuing parking tickets on game day. Sickening.
chipotle
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Bifferton Bobber Squat
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AG
1 million??? What are they going to do, fix a chipped curb? That money is a drop in a bucket.
SECTAMU#1
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There are ten other smaller universities in the A&M System, all of which struggle for money, especially the new campuses in San Antonio and Central Texas. Wonder how those smaller universities feel about the A&M System donating $1 million to the city for a traffic study for football games when they have greater needs that are not being funded?
ag-bq-seventy
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AG
quote:
1 million??? What are they going to do, fix a chipped curb? That money is a drop in a bucket.
Had you read the article, you'd know what the funds are going to do.
Jugstore Cowboy
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AG
quote:
There are ten other smaller universities in the A&M System, all of which struggle for money, especially the new campuses in San Antonio and Central Texas. Wonder how those smaller universities feel about the A&M System donating $1 million to the city for a traffic study for football games when they have greater needs that are not being funded?


You're really reaching for new reasons to complain about Sharp, eh?
Bifferton Bobber Squat
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AG
quote:
quote:
1 million??? What are they going to do, fix a chipped curb? That money is a drop in a bucket.
Had you read the article, you'd know what the funds are going to do.


Oh I did bro. Have you been up there on game day? 1 million is a drop in the bucket.

quote:
The Texas A&M University System will donate $1 million to the City to help upgrade traffic signals, control mechanisms and monitoring technologies, thereby making traffic flow more manageable and responses to traffic disturbances more efficient.

Aggielandma12
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AG
With all the parking tickets, MIPS and DWIs the city hands out you would think there would be plenty of money to fix without the university having to help out
BQ_90
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AG
Just swaping money, city can't use hotel taxes for this so they give it to A&M to keep them here instead of moving games to Houston, now the money goes right back for them to spend on this. Best part it's the fans oaying for it all
Definitely Not A Cop
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AG
Had a buddy that in one of his classes they studied college station traffic and had to come up with ways to make the city more efficient. They would then give it to the city's Civil Engineer (I'm aware that it is probably called something different. But it's the guy in charge of this kind of stuff.). Apparently he was your typical engineer, and didn't think there could be a better way to engineer the traffic system than how he had designed it, so all the suggestions would always get trashed. So good for him for finally trying to fix the problems.
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