DTCD generates daily traffic-control documentation that satisfies Washington's Daily Traffic-Control Documentation requirement. iOS, Android, and web — built for contractors and utility operators working under Washington Department of Transportation specifications.
Washington Department of Transportation contract specifications and construction-manual guidance require traffic-control documentation as a standard contractor deliverable. The naming and form vary by state; the underlying requirement — a date-stamped, contemporaneous record of traffic-control activity — is the same nationwide.
How DTCD applies to this: Exact daily traffic-control diary requirement.
One-tap PDF generation produces a date-stamped, GPS-tagged traffic-control diary suitable for submission to Washington DOT inspectors. Output cites the controlling spec by name on every page.
AI-assisted MUTCD code identification on every captured photo. Begin-zone, end-zone, taper, and device placement automatically catalogued. Decision-support only — verify all output.
Flagger hours, pilot-car hours, connected-device status (arrowboards, PCMS), and per-day deficiency notes — captured in the field, summarized automatically.
Real-time WZDx v4.2 / CWZ v1.0 feed publication for any closure. Connected-vehicle platforms, navigation apps, and Washington's 511 system can ingest the same data your diary cites.
The PDF below is a sample DTCD-generated traffic-control diary — the same format your inspector receives, customized to cite the controlling spec for the project's state. Every entry is GPS-tagged, timestamped, and photo-supported.
Washington contractors face the same documentation burden every day: capture photos, log devices, track personnel hours, generate the diary, file with the inspector. DTCD compresses that burden into a single mobile workflow. The output PDF cites Washington's Daily Traffic-Control Documentation requirement by name — so the inspector sees exactly the format they expect, the contractor keeps a complete record, and nothing falls through the cracks.
Built by an Iowa-based SDVOSB. Patent pending.
Free trial. iOS, Android, and web. Patent pending.
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