In 1969, the Department of Main Roads (
Queensland) installed the first
Intelligent Transport System in
Australia (located at
Surfers Paradise). In 1985, a second-generation traffic management system was installed in
Cairns, Australia. This was known as the TRAC System, or Traffic Responsive Adaptive Control System. Progressive installation of the TRAC system followed at several more sites around Queensland including the capital city,
Brisbane. In 1988, a traffic management system was installed for the
South East Freeway in Brisbane, Australia. The features included were ramp metering and graphical displays of traffic conditions. It also provided automatic incident detection. In 1992, a new integrated intelligent transport system development was commenced. The objectives were to lower ongoing costs while providing increased performance and opportunity for future ITS applications. The resulting system was STREAMS. In 2002, the division of
Department of Main Roads (Queensland) responsible for continuing development of STREAMS was reorganized to form Transmax. The company remains 100% owned by the Queensland Government Department of Transport and Main Roads. In April 2007, Transmax in partnership with
VicRoads implemented a coordinated ramp metering trial in
Melbourne,
Victoria on a 15 km section of the
Monash Freeway. Later that year, in December, VicRoads installed STREAMS to manage another six ramps. These developments were part of a much larger M1 Upgrade Project that continued over the next three years, eventually winning the 2010 National ITS Australia Award. The project to upgrade the 75-kilometre M1 Freeway, increased the capacity and safety of the Monash Freeway, the CityLink Tollway (Southern Link) and the West Gate Freeway utilising STREAMS as the Integrated Control System. == Software Architecture ==