Skip to main content

LED road studs provide tunnel guidance

Safety in tunnels is of paramount importance, and in 2014 the European Union will be introducing new safety rules for such structures. As in other parts of the world, many tunnels under construction will be built to high standards incorporating the latest technologies.
May 3, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The SmartStud system has been fitted in both the Elbetunnel and Massey Tunnel
Safety in tunnels is of paramount importance, and in 2014 the 1116 European Union will be introducing new safety rules for such structures.

 As in other parts of the world, many tunnels under construction will be built to high standards incorporating the latest technologies.

Many others are being upgraded, including the Elbetunnel, Hamburg, Germany, where the first tunnel under the River Elbe was built in 1911.

 Between 1968 and 1975 three new tunnel tubes were constructed, each carrying two lanes of traffic, with a capacity for 65,000 cars/day. In 2004, a fourth tube was completed using what was then the world's largest soft ground tunnel boring machine (TBM). The 3.1km Elbetunnel now caters for 150,000 vehicles a day.

 The two centre tubes have reversible lanes for peak traffic flows, and at present the three older tubes are undergoing a major refit, which includes the installation of a SmartStud optical guidance system.

The system has been fitted in the first tube and work will continue in the remaining two tubes in coming months. Once these tubes are completed the newer fourth tube will then be fitted.

 The first stage of the optical guidance system comprises some 20km of delineation and over 1,000 bi-directional intelligent white LED SmartStuds with 25m spacings.

 The studs are produced by New Zealand company 151 3i Innovation, which uses inductive power transfer (IPT) to power a range of products including the Smartstud and iiiLevel (eye-level) LED road markers.

 A SmartStud system is also in use in The George Massey Tunnel (Massey Tunnel) in Vancouver, Canada, which was opened in 1959 as the Deas Island Tunnel, and which and carries vehicle traffic on State highway 99 under the Fraser River Estuary.

 In 1989 under the increasing pressure of peak-hour traffic flows, a reversible lane system was introduced in the twin-tube, 629m long tunnel, and in an effort to reduce accidents during tidal flow, lane pickets were installed. The narrow tunnels and increasing amount of damage to the pickets by heavy vehicles plus high maintenance costs saw Main Roads remove the picket system and install the first SmartStud delineation system in North America in 2001.

 The system comprises 6.3km of mid-lane delineation with 620 bi-directional light heads both inside the tunnel and on its approaches.

Initially designed to be on only when the lanes were in contra-flow, shortly after its installation a decision was made to keep the system on permanently.

 "As the result not only did target reversible lane incidents during peak decline, so did overall incident rates as a resulting ICBC (2566 Insurance Council of British Columbia) business case done two years after installation supported, showing a 27% reduction in both target and total collisions," says 3i Innovation.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Key projects free up Auckland's congested motorway network
    June 14, 2012
    A number of key projects in Auckland, New Zealand will free-up the city’s congested motorway network - Mary Searle reports.Auckland is a sprawling city, home to 1.4 million people, one third of New Zealand’s total population. Until recently, greater Auckland comprised Auckland city, North Shore city over the harbour bridge to the north, Waitakere city to the west and Manukau city to the south. An amalgamation of these various cities’ councils, plus the regional council and three district councils into one,
  • Tampere road tunnel - a strategic link for central Finland
    April 4, 2016
    Progress has been good for an important underground road link in Finland reports Adrian Greeman. Assuming all goes well, the new Ranta, or Lakeside, tunnel in Tampere will open in full six months early; traffic could be running by the end of this year. Work on transforming the rundown city centre with new developments will get a major boost. It is a major achievement on a four-year-long project bringing significant benefits to one of Finland's largest cities. From the government's point of view the scheme w
  • WJ’s Guardian stud machine to be launched in Europe
    February 23, 2018
    Stud placement just got a lot safer for road operatives in continental Europe thanks to a collaboration between the UK’s WJ Group and Belgium’s ACB. UK-based WJ Group and ACB formed their joint venture company, ACBWJ around 2006 to share product knowledge, marketing and research into thermoplastics and road markings. ACBWJ will officially launch WJ’s Guardian stud placement vehicle into the European market at the Intertraffic exhibition in Amsterdam from March 20-23.
  • Record size TBM supplied for Chinese tunnel project
    June 7, 2024
    A record sized TBM is being supplied for a Chinese road tunnel project.