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Richard Mobarak, P.E. Technical Planning Program Manager Bernalillo County Public Works Albuquerque, New Mexico

Richard Mobarak, P.E. Technical Planning Program Manager Bernalillo County Public Works Albuquerque, New Mexico. Traffic Engineering Section . 700+ signals total in AMPA Bernalillo County 57 signals Staffing One Engineer Two Signal Technicians

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Richard Mobarak, P.E. Technical Planning Program Manager Bernalillo County Public Works Albuquerque, New Mexico

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  1. Richard Mobarak, P.E.Technical Planning Program ManagerBernalillo County Public WorksAlbuquerque, New Mexico

  2. Traffic Engineering Section • 700+ signals total in AMPA • Bernalillo County 57 signals • Staffing • One Engineer • Two Signal Technicians • Close to 90% of signals are located along major corridors in metro area

  3. Alameda Blvd.

  4. Alameda Boulevard • 17 signals – US 550 to I-25 • Multiple jurisdictions • Rio Rancho  City of Albuquerque (COA)  County  then back to COA • Most congested corridor in AMPA

  5. Hardware • 7 signals in unincorporated area • Twisted pair interconnect, actuated-coordinated closed loop system • TS1 NEMA Cabinets, Econolite Controllers

  6. Bernalillo County Traffic Engineering Section • BC Traffic Engineering Section - Operates 55 signals in the unincorporated areaStaff , Overview of Signal Program

  7. Adaptive Signal Control • Traffic Demand • Directional Peaks & heavy left turn volumes • Unpredictable at times • School Ingress/Egress • Incidents – truck traffic • Very high side street volumes – Rio Grande • Left turn queue spillover • Objectives • Improve Travel Time – peak/off-peak • Recover from pedestrian calls • Future transit priority timing

  8. Adaptive Signal Control – Challenges • Financial Resources, time, effort • Acceptance by signal staff • Acceptance by traveling public • Recurring cost • System failure • Revert to actuated-coordinated plan • Alarms • Interference from adjacent COA system

  9. Systems Engineering • FHWA’s Model Document used to prepare SE Document for the Alameda Corridor • ASCT – benefit potential • Capabilities of existing system • Needs not satisfied  Envisioned system • Identify type of system that would best serve our area • Developed system requirements which were used for specifications. • Verification/Validation process led to development of performance based spec

  10. Systems Engineering (cont.) • Request for Bid (RFB) process using low bid award difficult for adaptive system • SE Model Document more detailed than needed for system we plan to install

  11. Moving Forward • On going satisfaction with system – benefits versus effort to maintain • System complexity, training • System reliability • Public and policy maker acceptance • Bernalillo County Public Works committed to improving traffic flow on the Alameda Corridor with the implementation of adaptive signal control

  12. Richard Mobarak, P.E. Bernalillo County Public Works Technical Planning Program Manager 505-848-1598 rmobarak@bernco.gov

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