Institute of Transportation Engineers explained

Type:Transportation
Institute of Transportation Engineers
Abbreviation:ITE
Headquarters:Washington, D.C.
Origins:Pittsburgh
Area Served:Worldwide
Focus:Improve mobility and safety for all transportation system users and help build smart and livable communities.
Leader Title:International President
Leader Name:John Davis
Method:Industry standards, publications, conferences
Num Members:18,000
Formerly:Institute of Traffic Engineers
Footnotes:[1] [2]

The Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) is an international educational and scientific association of transportation professionals who are responsible for meeting mobility and safety needs. ITE facilitates the application of technology and scientific principles to research, planning, functional design, implementation, operation, policy development, and management for any mode of ground transportation.

History

The organization was formed in October 1930 amid growing public demand for experts to alleviate traffic congestion and the frequency of crashes that came from the rapid development of automotive transportation.[3] Various national and regional conferences called for discussions of traffic problems. These discussions led to a group of transportation engineers starting the creation of the first professional traffic society. A meeting took place in Pittsburgh on October 2, 1930, where a tentative draft of the organization's constitution and by-laws came to fruition. The constitution and by-laws were later adopted at a meeting in New York on January 20, 1931. The first chapter of the Institute of Traffic Engineers[1] was established consisting of 30 men with Ernest P. Goodrich as its first president.[4]

The organization consists of 10 districts, 62 sections, and 30 chapters from various parts of the world.[5]

Standards development

ITE is also a standards development organization designated by the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT). One of the current standardization efforts is the advanced transportation controller. ITE is also known for publishing articles about trip generation, parking generation, parking demand, and various transportation-related material through ITE Journal, a monthly publication.[6]

Criticism

Urbanists such as Jeff Speck have criticized ITE standards for encouraging towns to build more, wider streets making pedestrians less safe and cities less walkable.[7] Donald Shoup in his book The High Cost of Free Parking argues that ITE estimates give towns the false confidence to regulate minimum parking requirements which reinforce sprawl.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About ITE . Institute of Transportation Engineers . May 24, 2024.
  2. Web site: Board of Direction . May 24, 2024.
  3. Web site: History . Institute of Transportation Engineers . May 24, 2024.
  4. Web site: Ernest P. Goodrich . January 4, 2011 . Institute of Transportation Engineers . https://web.archive.org/web/20151208210803/http://www.ite.org/aboutite/honorarymembers/GoodrichEP.asp . December 8, 2015 . dead.
  5. Web site: ITE Ingrographic. April 1, 2021. Institute of Transportation Engineers.
  6. Web site: ITE Journal. Institute of Transportation Engineers. April 1, 2021.
  7. Web site: With fat lanes, traffic engineers kill in the name of safety . December 17, 2021 . Jeff . Speck . November 7, 2012 . GGWash.
  8. Truth In Transportation Planning . December 17, 2021 . Donald C. . Shoup . Journal of Transportation and Statistics . 6 . 1 . 2003 . University of California, Los Angeles.