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INRIX

INRIX Highlights AI Infrastructure Intelligence at Neudata's New York Summer Data Summit 2026 - INRIX Cities Can Reduce Emissions Without New Infrastructure - INRIX Late Night Football Leads to Lighter Rush Hour in England - INRIX Transparency as a Product Feature: Introducing INRIX Speeds Updates - INRIX Applying for a FHWA/INFRA Grant Track 2? Here’s How INRIX Can Help - INRIX World Cup – INRIX Traffic Report (June 12-June 28) - INRIX INRIX to Be Recognized at AWS Government Competency Leadership Circle - INRIX How Traffic Engineers Use Probe-Based Signal Analytics to Improve Signal Performance - INRIX World Cup – INRIX Traffic Report (June 16-June 21) - INRIX World Cup – INRIX Traffic Report (June 15) - INRIX INRIX World Cup Traffic Report – Day 1 Prediction for June 11, 2026 - INRIX World Cup – INRIX Traffic Report (June 12-June 15) - INRIX How Shippers, Carriers, and 3PLs Can Reduce Delivery Risk Using Big Data Basemap and INRIX Partner to Expand On‑Demand Access to High‑Precision Transportation Data Through DataCutter From Necessity to Lifestyle: A Year of Bike Commuting INRIX at NACTO Designing Cities 2026: Advancing the Future of Urban Mobility Mobility as a Hazard Signal: Lessons from Tornado-Prone Alabama Why Friday Commutes Are Falling First in the Bay Area’s Supercommuter Belt Memorial Day Doesn’t Just Change Traffic — It Changes Where Crash Risk Happens How Agencies Are Using Signal Analytics to Improve Traffic Operations Why Automated, AI‑Based Traffic Bulletins Beat Manual Reporting Construction Everywhere — But I-90 Became the Biggest Problem INRIX Celebrates NCTCOG’s TexITE Award for Advancing Data-Driven Signal Timing - INRIX How Cities Use Micromobility Data to Make Better Policy Freight Feels the Fuel Squeeze First: INRIX Data Shows Fleets Trimming Distance and Speed What Cities Can Learn from Each Other: The Value of Micromobility Benchmarking Five More Innovative Ways to Reduce Traffic Congestion and Improve Mobility Fuel Prices Are Rising, But Driving Behavior Looks Steady Teaching An Old LLM New Tricks: An Innovation Week Project What’s New in INRIX IQ: Signal Analytics, Mission Control & Data Downloader Updates From Data Collection to Public Trust: Why Transparency Matters in Shared Mobility Building a Hybrid Signal Performance Strategy for State DOTs From Data to Decisions: How Ride Report is Powering the Future of Multimodal Mobility What Happens When You Let Traffic Signals Pick Your College Basketball Tournament Finals? Are Drivers Slowing Down to Save Fuel as Prices Rise in March 2026? INRIX Recognized as a 2026 Artificial Intelligence Excellence Award Winner Turning Mobility Data Into Infrastructure Intelligence Detecting Data Center Construction Through Real-World Mobility Signals From Smart Streets to Smarter Cities: Validating and Scaling Traffic Volume Estimation in NYC Getting the Most Out of Micromobility Equity Initiatives with Ride Report Detecting Vehicle Abandonment During Wildfire Evacuations
Expanding Right-of-Way Intelligence Beyond the Curb and Onto the Sidewalk
Ashley Babani · 2026-05-02 · via INRIX

Cities face growing challenges in managing everything that takes place within the public right-of-way — from vehicle activity, construction, micromobility, and pedestrian access. To help cities meet these needs with clarity and control, INRIX released INRIX Road Rules Right-Of-Way Manager.  

This latest update marks a major evolution: for the first time, cities can fully map, edit, and govern sidewalk infrastructure, extending the Road Rules platform from curb-to-curb to building-face-to-building-face. By adding sidewalks, sidewalk policies, and curbside objects, Road Rules empowers planners, engineers, and mobility teams with a complete picture.

What Is Right-of-Way Management and Why It Matters 

Right-of-way management is how cities govern the public space between buildings, including lanes, curbs, sidewalks, and the policies that shape their use. As streets grow more complex, this has become increasingly important. During construction or events, sidewalks are often closed or rerouted, yet they have not traditionally been managed alongside lanes and curbs, creating coordination challenges. Cities need tools to distinguish sidewalk from lane closures, apply time-based rules, and link changes to permits. Meanwhile, curbside assets like meters, EV chargers, transit stops, and signage are often tracked separately. A “building-face-to-building-face” approach unifies all elements into one coordinated system. 

To address these challenges, cities are beginning to modernize how they manage the rightofway by treating sidewalks, curbside objects, and pedestrian policies as firstclass infrastructure, governed alongside lanes and curbs, not separately. 

This evolution is reflected in the latest update to Road Rules RightOfWay Manager, which expands rightofway intelligence beyond the curb and onto the sidewalk, giving cities a more complete, accurate view of how public space is used and regulated. 

Key New Features in Road Rules  

  1.  Sidewalks Added as a New Asset Class: Cities can now create and edit sidewalk segments directly in Road Rules including geometry, attributes, and policy layers. Planners can split and merge segments to accurately model how sidewalks function on the ground.
  2. Support for Sidewalk and Roadway Objects: Users can add, view, and reposition physical assets like: 
    • Parking meters 
    • EV chargers 
    • Transit stops 
    • Signs 
    • Fire hydrants 
    • Street furniture and more 

    This gives cities a single source of truth for the objects that shape mobility and public space. 

  3.  Powerful Sidewalk and Lane Closure Management: Construction and events can affect any part of the right of way, from sidewalks, to parking lanes, to travel lanes, yet they’re rarely managed within a unified system. Road Rules introduces tools that let cities: 
    • Add sidewalk closures and specific lanes tied directly to permits 
    • Apply “No Travel” policies with configurable dates and times and apply them to specific user classes such as pedestrians, cyclists, or other users of the public right of way 
    • Provide clear map-based visualization for internal teams and the public in addition to an API for companies using the right of way 
  4. Integrated Document References: Each closure can now include linked documentation, enabling planners to easily verify the source permit, track changes, and maintain compliance
  5. Purpose-Built for Urban Planners, Street Operations Teams, and Permitting Systems: Every feature in this release was designed with cities in mind to simplify workflows, improve accuracy, and reduce the friction associated with managing complex and dynamic rights-of-way. 

Road Rules Right-Of-Way Manager supports the objectives of the Philadelphia Digital Right of Way and Smart Mobility Improvement Project   and demonstrates how the platform can scale to meet the needs of modern mobility governance in major cities. By incorporating sidewalks, closure management, and curbside object capabilities, the release provides a comprehensive view of the right-of-way from the travel lane to the building edge. These tools enable cities to manage pedestrian access with the same level of structure applied to vehicle operations, while improving safety, transparency, coordination, and overall operational efficiency. 

Learn more here: inrix.com/products/road-rules/.