Skip to main content

1Spatial works with Arizona to visualise road changes

The department of transportation in the US state of Arizona has automated its data processes, says Duncan Guthrie. In Arizona, the Department of Transportation (ADOT) is improving the way it responds to the demand for information from the Federal Highways Administration (FHWA). ADOT is implementing an automated, repeatable process to simplify and smooth the creation and maintenance of their state-wide dataset. This will meet reporting requirements for ARNOLD - All Road Network Of Linear Referenced Data - an
March 8, 2017 Read time: 4 mins
1Spatial allows to see proposed 2015 road changes overlaid onto the 2014 road network
The department of transportation in the US state of Arizona has automated its data processes, says Duncan Guthrie*

In Arizona, the Department of Transportation (ADOT) is improving the way it responds to the demand for information from the Federal Highways Administration (FHWA). ADOT is implementing an automated, repeatable process to simplify and smooth the creation and maintenance of their state-wide dataset. This will meet reporting requirements for ARNOLD - All Road Network Of Linear Referenced Data - and HPMS, the Highway Performance Monitoring System.

The ADOT serves one of the fastest-growing areas of the country. It’s vital, therefore, that the state has accurate and reliable information about its road network for their own internal purposes and for meeting the external FHWA requirements.

Traditionally the FHWA has been interested only in high-level information - the large interstate network. Local counties and state governments have been left to record and manage other roads.

The ARNOLD initiative means that ADOT needs to supply an accurate and state-wide dataset of all public roads to the Federal Highways Administration on an annual basis. This not only enables Federal Highways to more effectively manage the country’s transport infrastructure, but allows the agency to designate funding on a state-by-state basis.

To meet these demands in 2012, ADOT embarked on its Centerline Unification project. Working with Works Consulting, ADOT implemented a solution to integrate its own state highways with local centerline data, provided by over 30 local government agencies, called locals, once a year. The project resulted in a state-wide road centerline dataset. An extension to the project then provided a semi-automated, bespoke solution to maintain the network with new submissions from the locals.

To streamline the data maintenance process, ADOT wanted to move to a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) solution and increase the level of automation, while providing valuable feedback to the locals on their data. To do so, ADOT and Works Consulting engaged with 8588 1Spatial to make use of their 1Integrate technology, used by US Census for the automated conflation and maintenance of their TIGER database.

The solution has created a set of predefined, automated business rules within the 1Integrate technology. These are applied to the data every time a submission is received from the locals. These business rules check that the data conforms and meets the ADOT’s required data quality standard. The features within the dataset that don’t conform are returned to the locals to be rectified.

Once the data submission meets ADOT’s quality criteria, 1Integrate automatically matches the new submission with the existing state-wide dataset and identifies any changes in real time. These changes are then integrated into the state-wide dataset, ensuring it is an accurate and up-to-date representation of the real world.

Clearly, this kind of automated process saves a significant amount of time and money compared to a manual or bespoke process. It also means that the locals can send in data at any time, so that instead of a dataset which is accurate once a year, the data can be updated continuously.

Having this accurate and current dataset is critical for ADOT. It will provide further intelligence around the transportation network by integrating with other transportation data sources and also enable external consumers of the data, such as other state government departments and the public, to use and rely on the information.

Ultimately, automating the maintenance of the state-wide road network will save ADOT money and resources and make the department more efficient. Importantly, the data can support innovative new ideas within the state.

Moving forward, the automated process will sit behind ADOTs clearing house, AZGEO. This will provide a web-based application for locals to submit their data and receive their data reports. This makes even easier the entire process of keeping the state-wide dataset accurate and up-to-date.

Many other states have already completed one full update of their road network. But the FHWA requires that network information is continually maintained. To do so requires technology to replace this huge and traditionally manual task.

*Duncan Guthrie is director of North America sales for 1Spatial

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ARTBA calls for change to air quality standard
    February 20, 2017
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is calling for changes by which the federal Clean Air Act (CAA) sets National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The CAA was last amended in 1990 but ARTBA says that official data shows that there has been an increase in distances driven as well as a significant reduction in air pollutants since that time. In a statement submitted for a House Energy & Commerce Committee hearing on modernising environmental laws, ARTBA said: “Overall, th
  • Help for US agencies’ to use new tool to boost concrete pavement quality
    April 23, 2014
    In a bid to reduce costs, increase pavement quality, and minimise travel delays caused by road construction, the US Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), and the Transportation Research Board (TRB) are to help agencies implement a tool that allows contractors to identify concrete pavement surface irregularities during construction. Real-time pavement smoothness has been selected for guided implementation under the second Stra
  • US89 in Arizona to receive emergency repairs
    May 9, 2013
    Funding for emergency repairs to the US89 route in Arizona is being provided by the US Government. The current US Transportation secretary Ray LaHood announced that US$35 million grant will tackle damage to US Highway 89 in Northern Arizona, which has been closed since its collapse due to a landslide in February 2013. The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) will use the funds to build a temporary detour on Navajo Route 20 (N20), and continue assessments and emergency repairs, as well as to evaluate
  • Developments in minimising construction defects
    February 27, 2012
    Egis has an innovative approach to addressing construction defects - *Martin O’Flaherty, Jean Pohu. Defects often become apparent after construction projects are handed over to the client and this is a common problem across most highway projects. The problem is shared by highway operators who have assumed the responsibility of managing such projects.