Skip to main content

Fugro uses Traffic Speed Deflectometer scans for Highways England

Fugro has started scanning structural pavement condition data from lane 2 using Highways England’s Traffic Speed Deflectometer (TSD). This is the first time for such scanning as part of the routine network-wide survey of England’s strategic roads, according to Fugro. The global asset integrity specialist has been carrying out Traffic Speed Structural Surveys (TRASS) since autumn 2014 under a 3-year contract (TRASS 3) - Highways England’s largest ever outsourced contract for pavement structural condit
November 14, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
6202 Fugro has started scanning structural pavement condition data from lane 2 using 8100 Highways England’s Traffic Speed Deflectometer (TSD).

This is the first time for such scanning as part of the routine network-wide survey of England’s strategic roads, according to Fugro.
 
The global asset integrity specialist has been carrying out Traffic Speed Structural Surveys (TRASS) since autumn 2014 under a 3-year contract (TRASS 3) - Highways England’s largest ever outsourced contract for pavement structural condition data.

TRL, the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory, is providing quality assurance and technical advice on the €1.3 million contract.
 
To date, Fugro operators have collected and processed TSD data on pavement strength from slip roads and lane 1 of the main line of the primary network.
 
Fugro said that it has achieved a faster survey rate than anticipated for the first half of the slip roads programme, enabling network-wide completion in the same year. This has accelerated the delivery of TSD data to Highways England to support the assessment and planning of slip road maintenance.
 
Also for the first time, integrated collection of ground penetrating radar (GPR) data is underway across all 14,000km of carriageways of England’s primary roads. This provides a continuous record of pavement structure and thickness.
 
The TSD data, with GPR data planned to follow, will be fed into Highways England’s Pavement Management System (HAPMS), enhancing the ability to monitor the condition of pavement assets, prioritise maintenance and improve cost forecasting. The GPR data will be used to interpret deflectometer readings, and for improved quality control and comparative analysis in HAPMS.
 
The TSD 20-tonne articulated survey truck assesses the structural condition of pavements using contactless Doppler laser technology. The fully automated, computer controlled process working at 80km/h replaces traditional deflectograph surveys carried out at walking pace. As well as improving safety and survey rates, contactless Doppler laser technology brings improved repeatability and quality control to pavement strength assessment.
 
Fugro undertook the accreditation of the TSD as part of TRASS 3, a vital step in its application for network-wide coverage and delivery of data into a national asset management system.
 
Road testing of the TSD was carried out in two earlier contracts, TRASS 1 in 2011, followed by TRASS 2 in 2012 which was awarded to Fugro alongside two other contractors.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • More tenders for the Lower Thames Crossing
    April 2, 2021
    The winners will build 23km of road connecting to what will be the UK’s longest road tunnel.
  • Stirling Lloyd in the fast lane: Waterproofing Warsaw’s Rowecki Bridge
    January 19, 2016
    Warsaw’s General Stefan Rowecki Bridge, or the Grota Bridge, is the second largest in the Polish capital and, as part of the Trasa Toruska expressway, it is the busiest. The structure, which opened in 1981, handles 150,000 cars daily, so repairs were always going to be tricky if minimal disruption to traffic was to occur. The steel orthotropic deck consists of two structurally independent parts – each with four traffic lanes. This meant that pedestrians and cyclists were restricted to two very narrow track
  • Benefits of bitumen technology research
    March 15, 2012
    Bitumen technology is benefiting from years of research and development - Kristina Smith. On a 2.7km loop of road in Auburn in Alabama, US, a lorry driver drives his triple-truck round and round. During his eight-hour shift, he will have covered 544km, with another driver waiting to take over from him for the next shift. Their mission is to seriously damage the road. This is the National Center for Asphalt Technology (NCAT), where sponsors from states and private companies pay to test out new materials and
  • UK’s Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance – ALARM – survey
    June 16, 2017
    Within years, one in six UK local roads will need repairs or face closure, according to the latest Annual Local Authority Road Maintenance – ALARM – survey. The cumulative effect of an ageing network, decades of underfunding, increased traffic and wetter winters has led to around 17% of all UK local roads reportedly in poor structural condition, with less than five years of life remaining. The 22nd annual ALARM survey is a comprehensive study into local road maintenance funding and conditions. Local authori