Skip to main content

Sacyr and GMV do a cone deal in Spain

The Automatic Cone Machine Safe Signalling System – ACM3s – being developed by Sacyr Conservación will use GMV’s uPathWay solution in a leader-follower vehicle technology where a robotic arm on a trailer places and picks up highway safety cones.
By David Arminas January 26, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The autonomous machine, which eliminates the need for human workers to be on the roadway or exposed to physical risks, will use GMV’s uPathWay solution

Sacyr has signed an agreement with the Spanish technology multinational GMV to develop a prototype of the autonomous system for placing and collecting traffic cones.

The project, called Automatic Cone Machine Safe Signalling System (ACM3s), being developed by Sacyr Conservación, involves the design of an autonomous cone-handling system.

The two-year agreement is funded by the Centre for Technological Development and Innovation (CDTI), a Madrid-based government agency to foster the development of new technologies within Spanish companies. The autonomous machine, which eliminates the need for human workers to be on the roadway or exposed to physical risks, will use GMV’s uPathWay solution.

Equipped with autonomous navigation and leader-follower technology, the trailer follows the lead maintenance vehicle, placing cones according to safety protocols, detecting obstacles and maintaining the required signalling. At the end of the operation, the trailer automatically re-hitches itself to the lead vehicle.

For accurate cone placement and pick-up, the trailer has a built-in robotic arm that uses artificial intelligence-based algorithms that factor in the relative position of each cone. Sacyr says that ACM3 will increase road safety and help detect the presence of vulnerable road users.

Sacyr is a global infrastructure and services company with operations in 20 countries and with a focus on public-private, P3, projects.

GMV, a privately owned global technology group founded in 1984, has a presence in Europe, the Americas and Asia employing more than 3,000 people. It operates in the sectors of intelligent transportation systems, automotive space, aeronautics, defense, cybersecurity and IT for government authorities and major corporations. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Weigh-in-motion key to maximising road life
    February 24, 2012
    The market and technology for weigh-in-motion systems continues to evolve – Mike Woof writes. for both mature and developing highway infrastructure networks, traffic densities play an important role in determining road wear and life. Monitoring traffic volumes and individual vehicle weight is crucial for ensuring roads can cope in the long term and that maintenance can be planned, while the problem of overloading can be eliminated.
  • 1st IRF Europe & Central Asia Regional Congress held on in Turkey
    November 18, 2015
    The International Road Federation (IRF) organised its first Regional Congress & Exhibition in Istanbul, Turkey on 15–18 September, 2015 The IRF is a non-governmental, not-for-profit membership organisation founded in Washington, DC in 1948 with the mission to encourage and promote development and maintenance of better, safer and more sustainable roads and road networks around the world.
  • Alliance for safe US roadway builds
    April 23, 2012
    A leading US highway construction association has renewed its pledge to work with the federal government to reduce deaths and injuries in roadway construction zones. The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) said the ‘Work Zone Safety Alliance’ will develop and distribute education material over the next two years aimed at preventing worker injuries and deaths from construction vehicle runovers and backovers. The education drive will also focus on increased outreach to non-English-spe
  • Bartco and SRL Traffic Systems develop integrated traffic lights
    April 7, 2017
    Variable message sign manufacturer Bartco UK says it is working with SRL Traffic Systems to create a portable variable message sign (VMS) to be integrated with temporary traffic lights SRL Traffic Systems approached Bartco UK to create the manufacturer’s smallest VMS, designed to show basic safety information during temporary traffic light installation and road works.