The pandemic has changed everything in the transportation field – every mode of transport has been impacted.
The I-66 Outside the beltway Project is expanding approximately twenty-five miles of the existing I-66 corridor into a multimodal travel solution for the ever-growing northern Virginia region outside Washington, DC.
With the advent of electric, connected and autonomous vehicles (AVs), the world of mobility is changing rapidly. Nearly half of all vehicles are expected to have some level of automation by 2030.
If necessity is the mother of invention, the LBJ Express megaproject in Dallas, Texas, is a case study in pioneering engineering design and forward-thinking financing.
The Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) metroplex area is currently home to over 7.5 million people according to the US Census Bureau’s 2020 census and is ranked as the fastest growing city in Texas.
Cintra does all it can to make trips on our roads a more reliable experience. We want to give folks a better option, so they don’t end up in endless gridlock like you see on the highways around Manhattan and LA.
It is expected that almost half of new cars sold by 2030 will have some form of automation, level 3 or above.
From delivery bot trials to autonomous shuttles, the roads of the 21st century are already taking on a very different look and feel.
Private industry has often been the driver of innovation in America, and innovative companies have helped propel societies and economies forward.
In March 2020, when the world suddenly slowed down and millions of workers had to move from their offices to their homes, the transportation and mobility sector had to start asking questions about its future.