Skip to main content

Data sharing boosts workzone safety

Faster and safer utilities works are the benefit of innovative data sharing moves – Mike Woof writes
March 2, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
RSS

Faster and safer utilities works are the benefit of innovative data sharing moves – Mike Woof writes

Utilities works in urban areas can cause major problems with regard to traffic congestion, as well as posing key safety issues for road users and site workers. Better planning of utilities operations can help tackle congestion and prevent jams, while also ensuring that on-site personnel have a safer working environment.

To ensure that site workers know the exact location of buried utilities, comprehensive mapping operations that provide access to accurate data are vital. These speed working and cut traffic delays, while reducing the risk of accidental electricity cable-strikes or damage to gas pipes, which can be extremely dangerous for site workers. In addition, the risk of flooding from striking water mains or causing Internet and communications blackouts from damage to fibre optic links can be avoided.

In the US, contractors can call up a central information centre to find out details of buried utilities. However in the UK this has now gone one step further with the availability of information to all interested parties on buried utilities being placed on-line.

This innovative approach to the management of utilities works is the result of a partnership that has produced the Intelligent Trench. The novel underground mapping solution is also being combined with 3178 PelicanCorp’s beforeUdig service to deliver a comprehensive and accurate national record-sharing service for underground assets in the UK. The new no-charge service allows local authorities and contractors to use the Intelligent Trench portal to access utility plan information directly from the portal’s data base, as well as to initiate utility plan requests for additional plan information through the beforeUdig service. And the data is available through a one-stop operation. The service provides asset data quickly and efficiently, saving time and money for all stakeholders, helps improve the on-site safety of workers, and protects underground assets from accidental damage.

Steve Voller, industry solutions director for Bentley Systems, representing Intelligent Trench, and Marcus Edwards, managing director of PelicanCorp (UK), have jointly stated that the service has been developed to meet the need for a solution combining direct access to underground asset data using the Intelligent Trench portal and an automated plan request service. The web portal is based on 2603 Exor technology, which is part of Bentley’s AssetWise platform for asset lifecycle management. With this combined service, planners or contractors requiring information about these assets can reduce the time required to source key data. As a result, they reduce their costs and benefit from the timely delivery of the location records they require.

Intelligent Trench combines advanced radio frequency identification (RFID) asset marking from 152 3M, field-based GPS data collection software from Trac-ID, a web portal and Exor spatial asset data base from 4019 Bentley Systems, and industry best practices, such as non-invasive surveys, from Infotec. Together, these technologies enable every excavation to be accurately and cost-effectively recorded, photographed, and mapped on a web portal. Access to the stored data is provided free of charge to registered users.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IBI’s Routemapper charts new territory with Highways England
    September 14, 2016
    Mapping the asset High-speed data collection just got faster for England’s newly created strategic roads operator Highways England’s establishment as a publicly held company in 2015 created a need for a highly accurate asset inventory. This was potentially very costly and had serious safety implications. As well as its relationships with numerous managing agents and contractors, assets include 35,300km of highway, 12,100km of earthworks, 23,200km of safety fences, 150,000 technology assets and sig
  • Software innovations boosting construction efficiency
    February 6, 2017
    Software innovations can help road construction and asset management – Mike Woof writes New developments in construction software offer major benefits for civil engineers, contractors and maintenance firms. The latest advances will help optimise the construction process, while also allowing easier monitoring of existing assets. In terms of construction, Bentley Systems is again pushing the bar with regard to advanced software solutions. Its latest OpenRoads ConceptStation package is said to combine en
  • Optimising operations with construction software gains
    May 20, 2015
    Innovations in construction software are helping boost project efficiency and optimising project operations – Clive Davidson writes Over the past decade, while construction engineers have been putting up buildings or infrastructure, software engineers have been developing a parallel universe where virtual buildings or infrastructure can be created in ever increasing detail. What started with 2D architectural drawings in computer-aided design (CAD) systems, has become a multi-dimensional world, with 3D ge
  • Data handling for efficient machine control
    October 16, 2012
    The rapid increase in information availability is transforming the construction sector. Conventional methods used for sourcing geographic data based on maps and localised sampling meant that there was often a lack of accurate information relating to ground conditions at specific areas where work was planned, often resulting in unwelcome surprises for construction companies along with additional costs for projects.