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

  • Tackling India’s road safety will reduce crash rate
    February 19, 2013
    India’s road safety record is the world’s worst but there are plans to tackle the problems. Patrick Smith reports from New Delhi. A speeded up video of a short section of road in the Indian capital Delhi was followed by a question. “How many infringements did you count in that 25-second clip on a typical day in Delhi,” asked Dr Rohit Baluja, a question that brought understandable silence. It equated to hundreds of millions of infringements each year, said Dr Baluja, president, Institute of Road Traffic Educ
  • Presidio Parkway: the Golden Gate Bridge’s new southern approach road
    May 29, 2013
    Work on the Presidio Parkway, a new breathtaking and eco-friendly southern approach road to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge, has entered its crucial second and final phase. As Guy Woodford reports, the vital US$1 billion project has overcome legal as well as environmental challenges to stay on course for its expected 2016 completion Just after 9pm on Friday April 27, 2012 a large public crowd looked on excitedly as a fleet of more than 40 R&L Brosamer and Ferma Corporation deployed hydraulic demolition h
  • Not at fault?
    May 26, 2016
    A British man was recently pursued by police when he was spotted riding his motorcycle at speeds of up to 160km/h close to the city of Brighton. A police helicopter was sent to track him as he dodged police cars at speed and during the pursuit, he managed to crash the bike and lose his helmet in the process. Undeterred however he continued at speed, still followed by various police cars. After entering the city itself, he managed to elude the police car but then crashed his bike again, escaping on foot and
  • PPRS: the positive side of structural failures
    March 27, 2018
    You learn from your failures, not your successes. That was the overall message for delegates during the day-two morning session on the impact of engineering structural failures. These lessons are also too often “painful”, said Anne-Marie Leclerq, deputy minister for infrastructure within the ministry of transport for the Canadian province of Quebec. On September 30, 2006, a span of the six-lane Concorde Bridge in Laval, near Montreal, collapsed crushing to death five people and injuring six. Only recently