Tech Tower

 

The general public is invited to attend this event, which will take place in Georgia Tech’s Clough Commons from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.  The $10 registration fee will include a light breakfast and lunch. Seats are limited and pre-registration is required.

The Atlanta Transportation Camp will be the fifth such summit to be held in a major metropolitan area since 2011. The camps held in Montreal, New York, DC and San Francisco each sought to build connections between disparate innovators in public administration, transportation planning and operations, information design, and software engineering, says Atlanta Transportation Camp organizer Ted Bradford.

Civil engineering professor Dr. Kari (Edison) Watkins will be one of the attendees. The 1997 Georgia Tech graduate helped to design and develop a smart phone app called OneBusAway (OBA) which allowed public transit riders in the Puget Sound area of Washington to find out, in real time, when the next bus will arrive. Since coming back to her alma mater to teach, Watkins has helped to develop another smart phone app, CycleAtlanta that tracks bicycling routes in the greater Atlanta area. She is also working with graduate students to develop an application similar to OBA for use in Atlanta.

Transportation is a major metropolitan issue, with direct impacts on economic strength, environmental sustainability, and social equity. Recent advances in technology (“web 2.0,” mobile computing, open source software, open data, and spatial analysis) present opportunities to improve mobility more immediately and at a lower cost than has ever been possible in the past.

This Transportation Camp will be the first in the City of Atlanta and the southern United States. Collaborators on this Camp include OpenPlans, Imagine Atlanta, and Dr. Watkins’ Urban Transportation Lab at Georgia Tech.

For more information, contact Ted Bradford, Transportation Camp Organizer at (404) 946-3809 or Bradford.ted@gmail.com

 

 

Image