Skip to main content

SRL’s outta sight VMS

By David Arminas June 10, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Just because you don’t see us…..


England’s National Highways agency is using a variable message sign(VMS)  to display non-regulatory messages to indicate that maintenance teams may be out of sight.

The is the first time that such messages have been displayed in an effort to better communicate to drivers that ahead lay obstacles, diversions road works. The system from SRL Traffic Systems is displaying wording not usually used, including ‘Working even out of view’, to provide an awareness of operations not within eyesight of a driver or outside of the public eye.

Last October, under the initiative by SRL Traffic Systems and road maintenance provider Kier and in collaboration with National Highways, installed the signs in a contraflow section of the A417 Missing Link project. It was done as part of National Highways’ Electronic Boards for Roadworks review and resulting guidelines.

The implementation of the review’s recommendations represents a significant advancement in how project teams communicate with road users during construction activities on England’s Strategic Road Network. The agency said that the aim of guidelines is to provide project teams with best practice for effective use, monitoring and updating of electronic boards. Unlike traditional portable variable message signs, electronic boards are designed to offer a more user-friendly approach to information dissemination during roadworks.

Industry research has shown that messages which can be read within four seconds are better for our road users. Previously, signs presented yellow text on a black background. The new signs display concise, friendly messages in white text over a black background.

SRL said that National Highways can now display messages using more options, such as text colour and border additions.

The agency will be able to use the signs more as electronic billboards than traditional variable message signs, explained Nick Nandhra, project manager for National Highways. “These new signs mark a significant advancement in our goal to enhance road user experiences,” said Nandhra. “Clear communication during roadworks is crucial.”

Kier and SRL Traffic Systems are collaborating to maintain signage and provide real-time updates.

Caroline Weller, variable message sign manager at SRL Traffic Systems, said the sign on the A417 Missing Link project is the first scheme to be completed using the agency’s new guidelines.

Gavin Jones, Kier’s project director, said Kier is confident that the signs will assist motorists travelling through the A417 and improve their journeys.

Meanwhile, National Highways said it will continue refining messages based on road user insights, addressing road user concerns and keeping messages relevant throughout each project phase.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Traffic management software tools
    March 5, 2012
    A joint development project between Delcan Corporation and Intelligent Devices Incorporated (IDI) has resulted in the sophisticated Intelligent NETworks product. This is an integrated product that combines the IDI Intelligent Control NTCIP system with the Delcan advanced transportation applications of NETworks. The system can be linked to dynamic message signs (DMS), CCTV and vehicle detector stations (VDS), traffic intersections, as well as environment road weather sensor stations.
  • TISPOL 2017: Europe’s road safety record suffers as austerity bites hard
    December 21, 2017
    Police budgets are being slashed, staff numbers are falling and Europe’s long-term trend towards ever-fewer road deaths has ground to a halt. Does Europe’s road network face a far more dangerous future? Geoff Hadwick reports from TISPOL 2017 in Manchester, UK. Europe’s road safety record is under threat. Lower and lower funding levels have become a very serious, and very worrying, problem for the EU’s traffic police bosses. They know that they must find new ways to focus road users on changing their beha
  • Advances in road markings
    March 16, 2012
    Recent months have seen many major and vital road marking projects and products completed and tested in different parts of the world. Guy Woodford looks at some of them in Europe, North America, the Middle East and Africa. The London borough of Kensington and Chelsea now has one of the most dramatic streetscape designs in Europe. Exhibition Road’s striking chequered granite design, featuring a single surface running from South Kensington Station to Hyde Park and the full width of the road from building to b
  • The hands-free debate is just one side of driver distraction
    August 13, 2019
    A debate about hands-free and hand-held phone use is welcome, but if we want to improve road safety and stop killing people it misses the point, explains Shaun Helman, TRL's chief scientist The Transport Committee’s report on driving and mobile phones is to be welcomed, for focusing attention on a pressing and growing road safety issue. As someone who provided evidence to the committee, I don’t need convincing that the use of a mobile device while controlling a vehicle is something that must be considered