National Post

Toronto green lights project aimed at breaking gridlock

Pilot to feature sensors, cameras in five busy areas

- Sammy Hudes

• The City of Toronto has agreed to let Rogers Communicat­ions set up cameras and sensors at five downtown intersecti­ons that will track the movement of vehicles, pedestrian­s and cyclists with the aim of alleviatin­g gridlock.

Rogers says the 5G-driven artificial-intelligen­ce system will capture real-time data about traffic volumes, speeds and congestion levels at the intersecti­ons as part of the city’s congestion management plan, which council approved last fall.

On Thursday, councillor­s gave the city the go-ahead to launch “transporta­tion innovation projects” that use “both pre-commercial and early-market technologi­es.”

That paves the way for the city to launch the pilot in partnershi­p with Rogers. The company will install the cameras and sensors along University Avenue at Adelaide, King, Wellington and Front streets as well as York Street and Bremner Boulevard.

The pilot will begin with a months-long phase focusing on data collection, after which Rogers will use the

AI software to determine what improvemen­ts could be made to help ease congestion at the intersecti­ons. It said the technology would eventually be able to analyze and manage traffic in real-time, including through Ai-powered traffic signal adjustment­s.

“I think we’ve all kind of had that experience where you’re sitting at a traffic light and there’s no cars coming in the other direction,” said Neel Dayal, head of innovation and partnershi­ps for Rogers.

“The idea here is that situation really shouldn’t occur. By having a good bird’s-eye view of what’s happening in the intersecti­on, you can dynamicall­y change the lights to ensure that there’s no cars sitting, idling, or pedestrian­s or cyclists in that matter.”

The city has previously alluded to its intention to pursue such pilots within its congestion management plan.

Transporta­tion Services general manager Barbara Gray said in a report to the infrastruc­ture and environmen­t committee last month that the city would work “with the local telecommun­ications companies to create a virtual test bed whereby technologi­es can be physically implemente­d in the field but tested in a safe, secure cloud computing environmen­t.”

Dayal said the technology is able to detect and classify various “objects,” including pedestrian­s, cyclists, buses or cars, and optimize light changes for both safety and traffic flow.

“You can improve both the traffic, but also ensure that there’s safe passage for vulnerable road users,” he said.

This is the first time Rogers is deploying the technology in a major urban environmen­t.

In 2022, it conducted a two-week test of the system as part of a research partnershi­p at the University of British Columbia’s Vancouver campus, where it similarly installed its traffic sensors and cameras at five intersecti­ons.

The company said the UBC pilot helped reduce vehicle delays by 182 hours and pedestrian delays by 93 hours on campus, while also slashing 2.8 tonnes of carbon emissions during the trial.

The technology remains deployed at the campus, said Dayal, adding he was curious to see whether the results from the forthcomin­g Toronto study would differ given the much higher volume of road users in the city’s downtown core.

“What we learned (at UBC) was the combinatio­n of using video and radar actually gave us the ... understand­ing what’s actually happening at the intersecti­on,” he said.

“We know that the city is very focused on extending different modes of transporta­tion, including walking and cycling, and so we want to make sure that the roads are safe for those types of users.”

 ?? EVAN BUHLER / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Rogers Communicat­ions says it will place cameras and data-tracking devices at various
busy intersecti­ons in the city and use AI software to identify ways to ease congestion.
EVAN BUHLER / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Rogers Communicat­ions says it will place cameras and data-tracking devices at various busy intersecti­ons in the city and use AI software to identify ways to ease congestion.

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