Skip to main content

Professional Pavement Products’ LaneAlert 2x grabs ATSSA award

LaneAlert 2x, the latest safety system from Professional Pavement Products, has won the Most Innovative Product award from the American Traffic Safety Services Association (ATSSA). Professional Pavement’s LaneAlert 2x is a bi-directional marking that displays two distinct messages, Depending on which way the driver approaches, he or she will see only one message. Professional Pavement, headquartered in Jacksonville in the US state of Florida, makes safety products including road markings and also distribu
June 27, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Award-winning LaneAlert 2x: innovative, according to American Traffic Safety Services Association - ATSSA
LaneAlert 2x, the latest safety system from Professional Pavement Products, has won the Most Innovative Product award from the 2466 American Traffic Safety Services Association (ATSSA).


Professional Pavement’s LaneAlert 2x is a bi-directional marking that displays two distinct messages, depending on which way the driver approaches, he or she will see only one message.

Professional Pavement, headquartered in Jacksonville in the US state of Florida, makes safety products including road markings and also distributes highway safety products.

Greg Driskell, president of Professional Pavement, accepted the ATSSA award in front of more than 3,400 people at the 48th Annual Convention & Traffic Expo in San Antonio, Texas.

“I hope that the LaneAlert 2x will change the way we see roadway markings,” he said.

Motorists recognise lines on the road to guide their path. These lines are paint or thermoplastic. LaneAlert 2x, however, is a polyurethane marking that can appear as a normal white or yellow line like motorists are used to.

“But if approached from the opposite angle, for example if a driver tries to enter an off-ramp from the wrong direction, the line itself will appear red, or have arrows that indicate to the driver that they are going the wrong way.  It looks magical,” Driskell said.

The company has also developed directional messages that say “Do Not Enter” and “Wrong Way”.

For Driskell, the issue is personal. “We had one of our employees mistakenly enter a roadway going in the wrong direction and unfortunately, a police officer was killed. Everyone involved was devastated. I decided right then that I was going to work on a solution.”

Full-scale production of LaneAlert 2x is expected by this summer. Meanwhile, the company has a pilot programme underway which has sparked interest from more than 20 state-level departments of transportation.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TransCore debuts GPS-based device for infrastructure-less tolling and safe driving applications
    May 1, 2012
    TransCore has today launched ROVR, a GPS device with GSM communications that allows infrastructure-less tolling and includes an optional driver safety monitoring feature shown to dramatically reduce accidents, improve fuel economy, and decrease Greenhouse gases (GHG).
  • Highway 407 Revisited – smart tollroad extension
    June 7, 2016
    In the late 1990s, World Highways published a supplement on construction of Canada’s Highway 407, the world’s first all-electronic toll road. But how successful has it been? David Arminas reports from Toronto The head office for 407 ETR Concession Company is a low-rise building next to exit 59, just north of Toronto, Canada’s economic powerhouse. The building may be non-descript but inside is the advanced technical heart of Highway 407 ETR – Express Toll Route. It houses the latest toll monitoring techno
  • Foundations for Mexico highway with help from Liebherr
    November 9, 2017
    A Liebherr rotary drill rig and oscillator combination has been working in Mexico on a highway project for contractor Mota-Engil. A Liebherr piling rig is playing an important role on a major Mexican highway construction project being carried out by a division of the Portuguese firm Mota-Engil. The use of the rig by Mota-Engil Mexico’s newly formed geotechnical division is helping to set new quality standards for piling in the country. The contractor is leasing one of the latest Liebherr LB 24-270 rotary
  • High-tech, high places: 3M in US and MetService in New Zealand
    August 1, 2017
    The US state of Michigan sets up a high-tech test road while New Zealand’s transport officials buy in some high-tech weather forecasting. The road safety division of 3M will provide the US state of Michigan with lane markings and retroreflective signs for a connected vehicle technologies trial along the I-75 highway. Around 5km of the Interstate 75 work zone in Oakland County will be transformed over the next four months to improve safety for drivers and test advanced vehicle-to-infrastructure technologie