Skip to main content

Ramboll’s Simon Benfield looks at the future of gantry design

Gantries first appeared over highways in the late 1960s and are now of increased importance, thanks to the emergence of Smart Motorways, writes Simon Benfield* The motorway network exhibits a timeline of innovation; lane control signals on highways appeared in the 1970s
September 29, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Gantries: essential for tomorrow’s motorways (photo courtesy of Paul White)

Gantries first appeared over highways in the late 1960s and are now of increased importance, thanks to the emergence of Smart Motorways, writes Simon Benfield*

The motorway network exhibits a timeline of innovation; lane control signals on highways appeared in the 1970s, with variable message signals following in the 1980s. By the late 1990s controlled motorways had been introduced on the M25. Managed Motorways were introduced in the 2000s and the past decade has seen the emergence of Smart Motorways that use technology and a regional traffic control centre to manage the traffic flow.

Gantries are now vital to the operation of Smart Motorways.

They help identify incidents and warn road users, give traffic flow advice and journey time information as well as mandate reduced speed limits. Smart Motorways can also increase a motorway’s capacity by 20 to 40% and at a fraction of the cost of conventional widening, depending on availability of land and constraints caused by existing structures. It is therefore imperative that construction, erection and commissioning of gantries is as rapid and efficient as possible to reduce disruption, costs and time.

Designs are developed through close collaboration between designers, fabricators and equipment suppliers. As well, equipment requires regular maintenance to ensure Smart Motorways operate safely and efficiently.

Time spent working onsite is costly. To reduce this, a product-based approach has been developed for gantry designs as well as for the tools to execute these designs.

Generic gantry types and subtypes are also now tailored to a range of requirements for specific highways: different equipment levels, varying provisions for fixed signage, different spans and wind speeds. In fact, wind loading is usually the primary design driver for gantries.

Using automated design processes, subtypes can be generated very quickly - in less than a day sometimes - as a new requirement is identified. Standard parts and arrangements help streamline a production-line approach to gantry manufacture. Structures can be outfitted offsite, which reduces hazardous on-site work.

To save yet more time, the design of the main structural connections has been simplified to speed up on-site erection of a gantry. If an experienced fabricator or erector is involved, erection time can be less than 10 minutes, as was recently seen on the UK’s M60 and M62 during part of the Manchester Smart Motorway project.

Unsurprisingly, the biggest focus will be on driverless vehicles - not only on how they will impact driver experience and congestion, but how roads will accommodate them. With road and traffic information beamed directly into the vehicle via satellite, signs and signals can be discarded and vehicle sensors will “see in the dark”, negating the need for road lighting, on motorways at least. The removal of human error means that barriers are no longer needed. As vehicles can talk to one another, traffic flows can “zip” together, dramatically changing the appearance of junctions.

But do gantries have a limited lifespan? This is not likely because of their central role in physically supporting telecommunications systems that in turn reduce the reliance on satellites. They will continue to carry sensing equipment required to manage the feed into individual vehicles.

They may also even earn their keep by supporting valuable advertising that can be tailored to a captive audience in driverless cars beneath them.

*Simon Benfield is a team director at 6801 Ramboll

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK: 50 Years of motorways
    July 6, 2012
    On 5 December, 2008 Britain’s motorway network celebrated its 50th anniversary, and to mark the occasion the Road Users’ Alliance (RUA) published ‘50 Years of Motorways,’ which claims that from a slow and modest start (over 30 years behind its European neighbours) the UK network has never managed to catch up. According to the publication, in the 1960s and early 1970s motorways were viewed as a route to renewal and prosperity. The network made some headway and grew to 2,500km; it crawled a further 1,000km ov
  • Indra’s Horus added to more tunnels on Bogotá-Villavicencio route
    January 7, 2019
    Spainish IT firm Indra has implemented its Horus management system for the Herradura, Moscosio, Culebra and Oro Perdido tunnels in Colombia. The new tunnels, between Cáqueza and Puente Quetame, are part of the Bogotá-Villavicencio highway, one of Colombia's busiest roads. Indra's platform now manages 15 tunnels on the highway. This new section of the highway was opened in November 2017. The four new tunnels will be controlled by the Horus traffic and tunnel management platform, an Indra proprietary produ
  • Addressing road safety issues worldwide
    February 27, 2012
    Actions are planned on road safety but are they enough? - *Charles Melhuish and *Alan Ross report. Deaths and injuries on the world's roads are now a major health concern. Road crashes now cause around 1.3 million deaths and injure or disable as many as 50 million persons globally each year. The vast majority of these deaths and injuries (over 90%) occur in low- and medium- income countries adding to their already overburdened health facilities as well as adversely affecting economic and social development
  • Brine spraying can boost winter road safety and cut materials costs
    February 16, 2015
    A study on the use of a brine sprayer on the A8 Autobahn in Germany has yielded valuable data - *Jo Rommeswinkel writes. Since 2007, Autobahnplus Services (a+S) has been providing the operation and maintenance services on the 52km concession Autobahn A8 between Munich and Augsburg in Bavaria, a region renowned for its severe winter maintenance conditions. The Munich Augsburg section comprises 48km of six-lane dual carriageway and 4km of four-lane dual carriageway. Part of the road surface consists of low-no