Skip to main content

Construction Software Supplement: Software for Road Infrastructure is now available

Construction software is developing at a rapid pace today. World Highways’ special supplement, Software For Road Infrastructure, takes a close look at key technological developments within this sector.
January 16, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
The Advancing Comprehensive BIM award was taken by engineering design firm HDR for its Tappan Zee Hudson River Crossing
Construction software is developing at a rapid pace today. World Highways’ special supplement, Software For Road Infrastructure, takes a close look at key technological developments within this sector. For immediate access to the supplement %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal click here Software 2014 Digital Issue false http://digital.ropl.com/2014/software/digital.html false false%>.

The construction software sector has seen new and more sophisticated software programs being developed to help surveyors, designers, engineers and project managers involved in construction projects to work more efficiently, more collaboratively and to reduce costs. This sector is very competitive with a number of technology-led firms that heavily invest in researching and developing new packages, including construction project management software, construction estimating software, as well as more low-level and specific applications.   

This 42-page digital publication includes the latest construction software developments from the major suppliers. If you have an interest in construction software this supplement will provide you with unique and in-depth insights into the latest developments in this sector.

What you can find in the Software supplement:


  • The rapid pace of technological development of construction software delivers a steady flow of new packages to customers, heightened by the intense competition between key players.

  • Advanced software systems allow clients, engineers, designers and planners to develop projects efficiently and more quickly than in the past.

  • Cloud computing and the internet further broaden the sphere of construction software. One of the issues is with data handling as point cloud technology or continuous sensor systems retrieve vast quantities of information, which then have to be collated and analysed effectively.

  • Building information modelling (BIM) processes continue to evolve from their original conception.
%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Click here to read Software for Road Infrastructure. Software Digital Issue 2014 false http://digital.ropl.com/2014/software/digital.html false false%>

Related Content

  • Verco buckets up to extreme condition mining
    April 9, 2013
    Verco has been supplying buckets for mining in extreme conditions for more than 25 years. Proud members of the HARDOX WEARPARTS network, and with products boasting the logo HARDOX IN MY BODY, Verco specialises in the production of bucket for big excavators and wheeled loaders. The firm also produces wear parts, liners for crushers and recycling equipment.
  • Tecnoidea Impianti plants reputation worldwide
    April 9, 2013
    With over 3,600,000m³ of water purified daily in more than 3,000 of its plants all over the world, Tecnoidea Impianti is one of the leading companies worldwide for water purification plants and sludge treatment systems. Its closed-cycle plants are aimed at marble and granites, aggregates and soil washing, tunnelling and concrete areas.
  • London’s congestion charge is saving lives, a study suggests
    March 9, 2015
    Traffic accidents in the UK capital London have declined 40% since the introduction of a congestion charge in 2003, according to a new study. The number of accidents per million miles driven in the congestion zone fell to 2.6 accidents per million miles from an average of 12.4 before the introduction of the charge. Researchers at Lancaster University also found a similar fall in the number of people seriously injured or killed. As well, accident rates fell in adjacent areas as a result of fewer motorists dr
  • Vietnam Expressway Corp to sell five highway routes
    October 31, 2014
    Vietnam is considering selling its ownership in several major highways to help pay for more road projects. The Ministry of Transport (MoT) recently said that the government’s infrastructure investor body Vietnam Infrastructure Development and Finance Investment (VIDIFI), would sell 70% of its ownership in the Hanoi–Hai Phong Highway project to a buyer from India. The move is part of a strategy that could see Vietnam sell off more of its investment in highway projects, either under construction or complete