ARTIMIS is a project to manage congestion, whether due to lack of capacity, accidents, disabled vehicles, etc., on 88 miles of freeway in the Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky area using modern technologies and techniques. This is the first project of this type in Ohio and Kentucky.
Goals of ARTIMIS include:
The ARTIMIS system includes 80+ cameras, 57 center-lane miles of fiber-optic cable, approximately 1100 detectors of various types, 40 fixed Changeable Message Signs, 3 portable Changeable Message Signs, 2 Highway Advisory Radio frequencies, 5 Freeway Service Patrol Vans, and a Control Center in Downtown Cincinnati.
It was started as a feasibility study in 1987 by the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Council of Governments (OKI) to determine if such a system could benefit the region's efforts to reduce ozone levels. With the signing of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) in 1991, a preliminary design effort was launched by OKI with the final document made available in early 1993. At that point, the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC), as contracting agency, along with the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT), with OKI, the Federal Highway Administration, and the City of Cincinnati as advisors, requested bids to complete the final design, develop and integrate the system software, oversee construction, and operate and maintain the system for two years with an option to extend operations and maintenance. A team led by TRW Inc. was the successful bidder. Subsequent contracts were awarded to other firms by ODOT for the design and construction of the Control Center and construction of the system infrastructure in Ohio and by KYTC for the construction of the infrastructure in Kentucky and the provision, installation, and integration of all of the system electronic components.
ARTIMIS officially begin limited operations in June of 1995 with the launch of its SmarTraveler® service. In March of 1997, operations begin from the Control Center. On January 8, 1998, the first 23 of the 40 Changeable Message Signs were placed into operation and the system was immediately put to the test when a tractor-trailer carrying hazardous material overturned and ruptured on I-75. The result was a total closure of the interstate for approximately 3 hours. Motorists followed the alternate routes that were posted and later analysis of the incident indicated that ARTIMIS conservatively saved approximately $100,000 in motorist use costs.
Some Other Facts: