The
EURAMP Workshop on Ramp Metering was held in Paris on March 22nd 2007.
Follow
this link to view the presentations
from the workshop.
The
project deliverables page is now updated
The
major objective of the EURAMP project is to advance, promote and harmonise
ramp metering control measures in European motorways in the aim of improving
safety and increasing efficiency of traffic flow. This major objective
is pursued within EURAMP via a number of multifaceted actions and sub-objectives:
-
Advancement
of methodological issues, with particular focus on traffic flow
safety, to secure a European technological leadership in the area.
-
Consolidation,
harmonisation and advancement of ramp metering practice in Europe.
-
Demonstration
of new developments in European sites and paving the way for a new
generation of extended (network-wide) ramp metering installations.
-
Co-operation
of ramp metering with signal control and further heterogeneous control
measures for maximum synergy in terms of traffic flow efficiency
and safety.
EURAMP
commenced in March 2004, and will last for 36 months. The first stage
in the project was the design and simulation testing of ramp metering
algorithms in several test sites and virtual sites. This was followed
by the field implementation and verification of the strategy. Field
demonstrations of ramp metering that will allow assessment of the strategies
and an overall comparative evaluation are currently underway. Click
here for details of workpackages and
tasks in EURAMP.
EURAMP
attempts to fill a number of methodological, technological and practical
gaps in order to advance ramp metering control measures in Europe to
aid traffic flow safety and efficiency.
The
EURAMP demonstration sites are:
-
xin
France, the A6 motorway south of Paris
-
xin
the Netherlands, the A28 and A2 motorways outside Utrecht
-
xin
Germany, the A94 in the east of Munich
-
xin
Israel, the Ayalon Highway in Tel Aviv
In
addition there has been simulation testing at virtual sites in Paris
and Munich.
The
test sites are located on motorways and surrounding networks of various
characteristics and levels of telematics infrastructure.
page
maintained by Helen Condie
at TRi, Napier University, last updated 22/11/07
Project
Funded by the European Community under the
"Information
Society Technologies" Programme (2002 - 2006)