Skip to main content

ARTBA presents transport safety awards

The American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) has presented awards to five separate industry initiatives. These were highlighted for commitment to promoting safety during the association’s 17th annual Roadway Work Zone Safety Awareness Awards held recently at a luncheon during ARTBA’s National Convention in Philadelphia. The competition recognises outstanding programmes, campaigns and technologies aimed at helping reduce roadway work zone a
October 1, 2015 Read time: 5 mins
The 920 American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) has presented awards to five separate industry initiatives. These were highlighted for commitment to promoting safety during the association’s 17th annual Roadway Work Zone Safety Awareness Awards held recently at a luncheon during ARTBA’s National Convention in Philadelphia.  
 
The competition recognises outstanding programmes, campaigns and technologies aimed at helping reduce roadway work zone accidents, injuries and fatalities. Winners were announced in three categories:
 
Outreach Campaigns: Programs that promote safety through implementation of employee and/or public education campaigns. There were winners at the national, and state and local levels in the outreach campaign category.
 
Training Programs: National, state and local educational programs that promote worker safety on the jobsite.
 
Innovations in Technology: The role that technology plays in improving safety in and around work zones with innovative products and methodologies or innovative applications to existing products and methodologies.

Outreach Campaign/Local/Municipal Level  

AGL Constructors, 4760 Archer Western, 1007 Granite Construction and Lane Construction Company for the 35Express Barrel Monster Campaign
 
To mark National Work Zone Safety Awareness Week, project crews on the $1.4 billion 35 Express project in North Texas designed and built large monsters from recycled orange construction barrels, safety and channeliser cones to serve as reminders to the traveling public to observe safety guidelines in work zones. To keep the community involved, AGL Constructors implemented a voting system where motorists were encouraged to vote via Facebook for their preferred barrel monster. This year’s monsters included King Kong, AGL Airplane, The Excavator, Emmet and The Eagle, and featured important safety messages encouraging motorists to stay off their phones, follow the flagger, reduce their speed and pay attention to signs while driving through a work zone.
 

Outreach Campaign/State Level

2451 California Department of Transportation, ProProse and Glass Agency for Be Work Zone Alert
 
Caltrans created an authentic campaign using young children of current Caltrans maintenance workers to deliver a deeply personal and compelling message to the public - Be Work Zone Alert. The educational campaign, featuring nearly 90 billboards and public service announcements, aired in 23 markets across California and has helped raise awareness, improve public safety and reduce collisions, injuries and fatalities on the state’s highways. The multimedia effort has delivered more than 42 million digital ad impressions and has reached over 432,000 people while addressing evolving safety messages like work zones may not always be marked by cones, safe driving means more than slowing, and drivers must be alert and avoid distractions in work zones.
 

Outreach Campaign/National Level  

DBi Services, LLC for the Billboard and Student Driver Outreach
 
In an effort to educate new drivers on the dangers of driving within work zones, DBi Services delivered a series of Work Zone Safety presentations to over 40 high schools in Virginia, Georgia, Texas and Florida. Industry experts explained to teenagers the importance of Florida’s Move Over law and its recent expansion to include vehicles with amber flashing lights working along the roadside.

In addition to engaging with high school students, DBi Services, in conjunction with National Work Zone Safety Awareness Week, sponsored a series of billboard ads and roadway message boards to remind motorists of the importance of driving carefully in roadway construction zones. The billboards appeared along stretches of I-95 in Brunswick, Georgia, potentially reaching 70,000 motorists/day.
 

Training Programs

Cornejo & Sons and Summit Materials, Inc for Entering and Exiting Work Zone Hazard Reduction
 
To reduce the risks associated with entering and exiting work zones, Cornejo & Sons developed a colour coded flag system to keep the public and workers safe when operating within a work zone. The company distributed instructions on windshield stickers and a training memo to all contractors, employees and third party groups to educate them on colour codes for each flag. The team created and organized a safer work zone by marking checked flags at the exits and coloured flags at various entrances to indicate the different delivery points for materials. By clearly marking each entrance, and designating entrances for different types of vehicles, Cornejo & Sons decreased the hazard and congestion from fleet trucks slowing to search for work zone entrances, leading to fewer employee accidents in work zones.
 

Innovations in Technology

Royal Truck & Equipment, Micro Systems, Inc. and Oldcastle Materials Group for The ATMA (Autonomous Truck Mounted Attenuator)
 
In collaboration with Micro Systems and Oldcastle Materials, Royal Truck & Equipment developed the next generation of roadway work zone safety - the innovative ATMA (Autonomous Truck Mounted Attenuator). At its core, a TMA Truck, or safety truck, serves as a protective crash barrier, preventing vehicles from entering work zones and helping to save workers’ lives. By outfitting the TMA truck with driverless technology, drivers will be removed from the cab of one of the most dangerous vehicles to pilot. In addition to being autonomous, the truck mimics the direction and speed of a lead vehicle through the use of sensors and can be controlled remotely through GPS Waypoint navigation. Two autonomous trucks will make their debut as part of a highway construction project in Florida by the end of the year.

Related Content

  • Digital cameras and VMS improve London and Scottish road safety
    March 18, 2016
    London and Scotland are using VMS and digital cameras to successfully lower road deaths. Road safety measures such as variable message signs (VMS) and digital cameras have boosted road safety in the UK capital London and also in the Scottish Highlands. And the systems need not be a drain on electricity supplies. Full matrix driver information signs from SWARCO Traffic, one of the UK’s leading traffic management technology providers, are being installed for the first time across the Transport for London (TfL
  • Pollution-free highways of the future: a reality?
    February 9, 2018
    More collaboration is needed to reduce the impact of highways on the environment, particularly air quality. The technology already exists, argue Bram Miller* and Martin Broderick* The European Environment Agency produced a report showing that a slow improvement in air quality has been observed across Europe. However, 9% of urban Europeans were exposed to nitrogen dioxide emissions in excess of the EU’s annual maximum limit in 2015. Meanwhile, associations between highways and the environment tend to be n
  • ERF and RSMA team up to deliver 1st European Road Infrastructure Congress
    January 18, 2016
    Europe’s road infrastructure is one of its largest community assets, yet today this asset faces unprecedented challenges. Shortage of public resources for maintenance, inadequate public procurement models for the delivery of infrastructure, coupled with the inevitable impact that the advent of vehicle automation will have on Europe’s infrastructure means that there is a urgent need for Europe’s road sector to work together to find solutions for the future. In this backdrop, and at a time when the UK governm
  • Safe Roads Safe Kids Project: delivering a safe journey to school
    October 15, 2018
    Every year 186,300 children die from road traffic crashes around the world. That is more than 500 children every day. Road traffic injury ranks among the top four causes of death for all children over the age of five years. According to data reported by the Moroccan Comité national de prévention des accidents de la circulation (CNPAC), young people below the age of 14 represent 15% of all the deaths on Moroccan roads and the majority of these are pedestrians. Many of these fatalities are amongst children