How It All Comes Together: RM3P in Action

Four sets of technologies, referred to as program elements, have been developed and deployed as part of RM3P. These technologies are designed to improve the efficient exchange of information between stakeholder agencies, to provide a platform and recommendations to operators and service providers to enable them to respond to incidents more quickly and effectively, and to provide information and tools for users to take advantage of available commuter parking lots so they can plan their trips to avoid congestion. The four program elements are outlined in the story below.

RM3P Database Icon

DEP
Data-Exchange
Platform

AI-Based Decision
Support System

AI-DSS
AI-Based Decision
Suppport System

Commuter Parking
Information Services

CPIS
Commuter Parking
Information Services

Dynamic
 Incentivization

DI
Dynamic
Incentivization

 

7:00 AM

SCENE ONE

A Typical Morning Commute

It’s 7:00 AM on a rainy weekday in the Northern Virginia region. Thousands of commuters are hitting the roads, buses, and trains to start their day. Suddenly, a crash occurs on I-95. Left unchecked, this could trigger miles of backups, late arrivals, and wasted time for everyone in the corridor.

7:01 AM

SCENE TWO

Data at the Speed of Light

Within seconds, the Data-Exchange Platform (DEP) begins to pull together information from across the region:

  • Incident information from regional agencies.
  • Traffic speed sensors along I-95.
  • Transit and parking data from connected systems.
  • Weather updates from the National Weather Service.
  • Traffic and vehicle data from third-party providers.

This creates a unified, cohesive picture of what’s happening on the network and is quickly available to agencies and partners.

 

 

7:05 AM

SCENE THREE

Turning Data Into Foresight

The AI-Based Decision Support System (AI-DSS) gets to work:

  • Forecasts how impacts of the crash will ripple across the corridor and region.
  • Predicts when and where congestion will peak.
  • Suggests strategies – e.g., adjusting signal timings and coordinating with transit agencies – to traffic operation centers to reduce impacts.

Instead of reacting after the fact, agencies are now able to act before gridlock sets in.

7:10 AM

SCENE FOUR

Helping Commuters Make Better Choices

Next, Dynamic Incentivization (DI) engages directly with commuters through the GoMyWayVATM app:

  • Drivers heading toward I-95 see in-app alerts about the crash.
  • They’re offered incentives to delay their trips, shift to alternate routes, or use transit.

By spreading out demand away from the incident, RM3P keeps the system flowing more smoothly for everyone. 

    

7:12 AM

SCENE FIVE

Making Parking Seamless

Meanwhile, the Commuter Parking Information Services (CPIS) brings parking data together across the region.

  • Available parking occupancy data from regional transit agencies is consolidated and pushed through DEP.
  • Crowdsourced inputs, including the ParkZen app, are also pushed through DEP and used to monitor parking conditions at designated commuter lots.
  • App users get commuter parking lot availability such as parking lot A has limited availability or parking lot B has plenty of availability.

For commuters, this means less circling, more certainty, and smoother transfers to transit.

7:15 AM

SCENE SIX

Better Outcome for All

By 7:15 AM, the impact of the incident has been substantially mitigated and adapted to current conditions.

  • DEP unified current data shared quickly across agencies, technologies, and tools, making inter-agency, multi-modal collaboration possible.
  • Travelers took incentives and rerouted earlier, avoiding the worst congestion.
  • Agencies coordinated proactively, guided by a common, fast operating picture.
  • Parking decisions were easier and faster, informed by continuous data flows.

What could have been a frustrating morning became a more manageable commute, powered by connected data working behind the scenes.

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