Skip to main content

Aussie demonstration for BG

A live crash demonstration of the Highway Care (HC) manufactured BarrierGuard 800 portable steel safety barrier was staged recently at Eastern Creek Raceway in Sydney, Australia. Organised by the Boylan Group, Highway Care International’s (HCI) partner, and Australia’s largest equipment hire company, Coates Hire, the event drew 200 Australian engineers, designers and road industry professionals and showcased technology already established throughout Europe.
June 18, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A safety demonstration was carried out in Australia of up-to-date barrier products
A live crash demonstration of the 1529 Highway Care (HC) manufactured BarrierGuard 800 portable steel safety barrier was staged recently at Eastern Creek Raceway in Sydney, Australia.

Organised by the Boylan Group, Highway Care International’s (HCI) partner, and Australia’s largest equipment hire company, Coates Hire, the event drew 200 Australian engineers, designers and road industry professionals and showcased technology already established throughout Europe.

Racing car driver Matt Sofi, a Formula 3 competitor and defensive driving instructor, drove the test vehicle into the barrier at 80km/h at an angle of 15°. Knowing the potentially jarring forces unleashed when a vehicle impacts with an inanimate object at high speed, Sofi was said by HCI to have approached the staged crash demonstration with a fair degree of caution.

“I was surprised because, with the initial hit, it didn’t bounce you off into another lane,” Sofi said. “The car was still straight and in a position where you could stop in a controlled manner and in addition damage to the car and the barrier was confined to just a few scratches.”

Motorcycle Council of New South Wales chairman Chris Burns was another said to have been impressed with the barrier’s safety capabilities. He described it as the most “motorcycle friendly” he had seen.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Open and shut case
    February 21, 2012
    Two British police officers were surprised to see a woman driving her car with the bonnet (hood) open. They stopped the woman who explained that the bonnet was faulty and that she was taking the car to a garage to be repaired. She had been squinting through a small 100mm high gap between the dashboard and bonnet as she drove her car to the garage. The incident was recorded by police in the UK county of Dorset where the authorities have been cracking down on bad driving. In another case, police stopped a man
  • Private sector shows leadership on road safety at UN High-Level Meeting
    September 26, 2022
    The International Road Federation (IRF) convened key industry leaders to discuss “Action for Road Safety: Private Sector Leadership” on the occasion of the UN High-Level Meeting on Global Road Safety hosted in New York on 30th June and 1st July.
  • From managed asset to service provider: the future highway
    May 20, 2019
    Every day we hear about Mobility as a Service (MaaS), but what about Roads as a Service? Geoff Hadwick reports from the ERF in Brussels The familiar physical asset called the road will increasingly be seen as part of an emerging global services sector. Given that, the role of the road is changing, notes Christophe Nicodème, general director of the European Union Road Federation (ERF). We need to think much more carefully about planning highway infrastructure in terms of people’s needs, said Nicodème,
  • Fast-track Biloxi Bay bridge
    July 18, 2012
    Construction of a bridge destroyed in a hurricane was completed early, and with some added aesthetic benefits Hurricane Katrina, one of the deadliest and costliest natural disasters in US history, made landfall on 29 August, 2005, devastating the Gulf Coast. The US 90 Bridge over Biloxi Bay (connecting the communities of Biloxi and Ocean Springs, Mississippi) was one of many major highway and railroad bridges knocked out of service due to extensive storm damage. The eye of the storm passed 96km west of Bilo