Skip to main content

Highways England tests ghostbusters

Highways England is testing seven new road marking products as part of a major international project to rid road surfaces of confusing ghost markings
March 9, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
The white line towards the top of the picture shows a standard road marking, while in the foreground is one of the alternatives being tested

The testing is a competition to help solve the global problem of ghost markings – especially confusing for drivers in bright daylight.

Huge progress is being made in a trial on the M5 motorway in south-west England, according to the agency which is responsible for maintaining England’s major road network, including motorways.

Highways England launched a €769,000 (£685,000) international research project last year to find a solution to issues around the removal of white lines and resulting ghost markings. The current competition is also to identify the most effective road markings that will also reduce damage to the surface when the lines are removed.

As part of the project, last November, Highways England announced that it had received 36 entries from around the globe, to be whittled down to the most promising products after a laboratory-based machine system that subjected the materials to over two million "wheel-overs".

The competition, launched in conjunction with highway maintenance companies Roadcare and Kier, is being funded through Highways England’s ring-fenced Designated Fund for Innovation.

Seven new road marking products are being tested to check their skid resistance and performance in the dry and wet conditions. Also being tested are five marking removal systems to see if they are more effective than currently used systems, noted Martin Bolt, head of lean and continuous improvement at Highways England.

One approach used in the trial has been to apply a black baseline first before adding the white line. This also fills in some of the voids in the road preventing the marking penetrating too deeply into the surface. Another advantage is that it provides greater contrast between the marking and the road itself which will be increasingly important as autonomous vehicles are introduced.

The companies whose marking products are being tested are WJ Roadmarkings, MEON and 3M – all from England - as well as Geveko Markings, the Swedish company’s markings business based in Denmark, and Swarco from Germany.

Removal systems under testing are from WJ Roadmarkings, Thames Hydroblasting, based near London, traffic-lines, from Germany, and the Dutch companies of Track Line and Veluvine.

At a testing centre in the Spanish capital Madrid, the markings were subjected to some two million wheel-overs to find the top products for skid resistance and performance. The best seven were then put to the test on the northbound carriageway of the M5 motorway.

Once testing is complete, the most successful products will be highlighted in research shared around the world in an effort to set new high standards for the road industry.

“The removal solutions being tested will also reduce the scarring/pothole creation by being less intrusive to the carriageway,” said Tom Tideswell, head of innovations at Kier Highways. “This in turn improves journey reliability by reducing the amount of closures required to carry out repairs in addition to saving money.”

“The trial will continue until April but the results so far have been very promising and the safety benefits are already clear,” said Bolt. “We are very optimistic that we have identified some effective solutions to a worldwide problem. They will also prevent damage to the road surface, saving time and money. We are certainly gaining a greater insight into the materials and processes we and the road industry could be using in future schemes.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The DURABROADS project targets safer mobility
    April 2, 2014
    The innovative DURABROADS project will help deliver a sustained reduction of fatalities in the long term, writes the ERF’s José Diez In 2012, Europe recorded the lowest number of fatalities since the first data were collected. All in all, fatalities were down by 9% in 2012, which means that 3,000 lives were saved that year. Should the current pace continue, we can be confident that the ambitious objective of reducing fatalities by 50% by 2020, compared to 2010, will be reached. To achieve the goals of
  • IRF Executives Talks: shaping the future of Intelligent transportation
    August 29, 2024
    Technological advances for the intelligent transportation sector are developing at incredible speed globally. For many leaders in the sector, one of the biggest challenges is how they should use new technology to shape the future of intelligent transportation. SWARCO chief executive, Michael Schuch, put forward his ideas in conversation with IRF Director General Susanna Zammataro ahead of the IRF World Congress in Istanbul in October.
  • Epoxy resins for resilient roads in Ethiopia
    April 4, 2022
    Using epoxy bitumen in chip seals could significantly increase the life of high-volume roads in low-income countries and make them more resilient to climate change impacts. The technology, which has been developed and used in New Zealand, will be trialled in Ethiopia this year.
  • Scottish application for SMA surfacing technology
    May 20, 2014
    A new Scottish specification for stone mastic asphalt could help with some of the durability issues sometimes experienced in the UK An alternative specification for stone mastic asphalt has been used on the A90 in Scotland, with tests suggesting that the material will be more durable than thin surfacing produced under the standard UK specification, Clause 942 of the Specification for Highway works.