Skip to main content

12D for Christchurch

Australia's increasingly popular 12D Model software package for road design, terrain modelling, surveying and drainage has been selected as the main design and survey tool for the coordinated earthquake rebuild of Christchurch in New Zealand The 12D Model software will be the common platform for a group of consultants and contractors making up the recently formed SCIRT, standing for "Stronger Christchurch Infrastructure Rebuild Team". They will use it for survey, repair and rebuild of both the road netwo
June 12, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Driving along roads in Christchurch calls for vigilance and care

Australia's increasingly popular 12D Model software package for road design, terrain modelling, surveying and drainage has been selected as the main design and survey tool for the coordinated earthquake rebuild of Christchurch in New Zealand

The 12D Model software will be the common platform for a group of consultants and contractors making up the recently formed SCIRT, standing for "Stronger Christchurch Infrastructure Rebuild Team". They will use it for survey, repair and rebuild of both the road network in the city and much of the drainage and water pipe network, which is most coincident with the roads.

The rebuild effort is likely to take at least five years and cost around NZ$2 billion said team member Adam Churchill, an engineer with the New Zealand consultant 2671 Beca. He has been appointed software system manager to oversee the coordination of software for the group which includes four major construction firms and four consultants as well as local and regional government. They are responsible for all horizontal linear infrastructure he said: roads, drainage and the reticulated water network.

The group comprises Christchurch City Council, Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA), the 1009 New Zealand Transport Agency, with contractors City Care, 2679 Downer, 2675 Fletcher Construction, 6191 Fulton Hogan, and MacDow New Zealand and consultants GHD, URS, 1524 Sinclair Knight Merz, Beca Opus and Eliot Sinclair.

Together they are working on an alliance basis, a form of strong teamwork operation that has been developing in Australia and New Zealand for the last decade and a half.

The work is extensive. The 6.3 magnitude event in February last year was overshadowed by the giant earthquake and tsunami disaster in  Japan shortly afterwards, but despite its lesser absolute magnitude was a significant disaster. Not only was it one of the largest in the last century for this young country, taking a toll of 185 fatalities, and causing massive damage across the city, but it has been followed by two more in June and December last year of around magnitude six.

Damage was particularly bad in the central area of the city, New Zealand's third biggest, where soft ground suffered major liquefaction effects.

"We do not have major highways here" Churchill tells 3260 World Highways "but the entire road network has been damaged with buckling and fissuring on most of the roads. Liquefaction caused "floating" of many manholes which now protrude up to 100mm from the surface."

He says driving home in the evening across the "munted" roads is a significant exercise in vigilance and avoidance. "Munted" is a local word for damaged.

The thousands of manholes and the local network in a city area at least 15km across have to be surveyed and then repairs be designed and carried out. Over 200km of roads and 80km of pipes are to be examined as well as bridges, retaining walls and culverts.

For doing this work, and for building up a 3D model of both design and "as built" data for the client at the end, 12D was assessed as the most suitable tools says Churchill. Its antipodean origin is an obvious advantage for support but he said its various modules for survey work, road design and for drainage network design all made it a useful tool.

It allows visualisation to be created quickly and for the drainage to be seen beneath the roads. "It also has the capacity to allow attributes  or metadata to be added to nodes, lines and points," he said, "which is very useful for tracking the particular input authors, tagging dates and changes, and for filtering the design in various ways when extracting information."

He said the assignment of attributes will also help the client bodies build a large GIS-based database model of the work as it proceeds. "We are waiting for Version 10 which has web map functionality that will help further with this." 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Modern road system is 'a must'
    August 2, 2012
    Australia's GDP could see a major increase if traffic bottlenecks in big cities were to be removed, and the government is addressing this as a matter of urgency A modern road system is a must in Australia where it is estimated that the removal of traffic bottlenecks could potentially raise the country's GDP by 0.8%. According to the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA), which made the prediction, infrastructure bottlenecks (particularly in cities, which account for over 70% of the country'
  • Road repair programme for Melbourne
    December 7, 2018
    A new programme of road repairs is intended to tackle problems on Melbourne’s roads. The Victorian State Government is financing works worth US$129 million (A$183 million) to around 200 road and bridge sections across the state, in a bid to improve road conditions. The work will be carried out by three firms, Sprayline Road Services, Fulton Hogan Industries and Downer EDI Works. The improvements will include repairing fences, fitting new guard rail and signs, resurfacing worn sections of road, filling in
  • World Highways rewarded as one the best business magazines worldwide in the Tabbie Awards 2017
    June 30, 2017
    World Highways has once again been recognised as one of the best business magazines in the world. Our 25-year anniversary edition last November was highlighted in the Best Single Issue category in the globally-renowned Tabbie Awards 2017, announced this week. And World Highways Deputy Editor David Arminas has also recognised for his February 2016 feature on an historic bridge rebuild. The article, which was headlined “88-year-old Peace Bridge between the US and Canada to get a facelift,” was listed as one o
  • Private consortium to finance Melbourne's Peninsula Link highway
    July 13, 2012
    Not long after the recent completion of the successful EastLink project (a 39km motorway providing a vital connection for 1.5 million people in Melbourne, Australia) the Victorian Government has started work on another missing link in Melbourne's freeway network further south with the construction of Peninsula Link. Peninsula Link is a key project in the Victorian Government's AUD$38 billion (US$32 billion) Victorian Transport Plan. With a AUD$750 million (US$630 million) price tag, the project is expected