Skip to main content

Innovation for mapping utilities

Gaist is offering a mapping solution it believes could boost efficiency for the utilities market
February 13, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Accurate mapping of utilities can be achieved with the new package from Gaist

This novel infrastructure digital twin tool is now being offered to the utilities market. The package can cut the cost and time of construction works and can increase efficiency by 10% at 0.01% of the project cost.

Gaist covers over 341,500km of the UK’s roads and pathways with more than a billion high-definition images. The firm says that this offers a complete and precise view of the highway network. Planners and engineers can explore the network from their desktop, enabling them to make cost-effective and informed decisions when planning and carrying out projects on roads.

This solution is said to add value to utility providers by identifying surface types and the accurate location of utility assets, as well as providing the ability to measure, which allows for accurate budgeting, planning design and delivery. The package allows providers to get it right first time. The data can also aid on-site inductions and briefings, mitigate health and safety risks and reduce costs through negating the need for on-site surveys.

Additionally, Gaist can provide complementary and value-added services such as ground-penetrating radar, traffic management, exact location of services and rod and rope duct proofing. The tool answers questions such as to what is needed to prepare for planned maintenance, or what percentage of roads are ready for fibre.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • RetroTek: standards are key
    December 12, 2022
    Accurate retroreflectivity measurements of line markings across the full lane width has become even more important after the US adoption of minimum levels of retroreflectivity.
  • Customer Comes Full Circle with Komatsu iMC 2.0
    April 4, 2022
    In 2017, the Budorealizacja company from Myślenice, Poland started using the first ever Komatsu intelligent Machine Control (iMC) excavator to be delivered in the country. Over four years on, the company now owns 10 Komatsu iMC machines across both excavators and dozers, and significantly, its fleet was further expanded when they recently became the first Polish customer to take delivery of an iMC 2.0 version of the PC210LCi-11
  • Bentley’s OpenRoads Designer CONNECT Edition Advances Roadway Projects
    November 15, 2016
    OpenRoads’ Comprehensive Modeling Environment Leverages BIM Advancements to Empower Project Delivery LONDON – The Year in Infrastructure 2016 Conference – 1 November 2016 – Bentley Systems, Incorporated, a leading global provider of comprehensive software solutions for advancing infrastructure, today announced that OpenRoads Designer CONNECT Edition will be available for Early Access on December 1, 2016.
  • New non-destructive testing technologies for roads and bridges
    July 11, 2018
    Two new technologies for non-destructive testing offer key benefits, one suiting road surfaces, the other suiting concrete structures - Kristina Smith reports Dynatest has developed a new way to measure and record the state of pavements, using a machine that travels at the same speed as traffic. The Rapid Pavement Tester (Raptor) has been seven years in the making and offers road owners the chance to have comprehensive surveys without the need to disrupt traffic. “People have been wanting to do this for