Skip to main content

Motorway surveys for Spot the robotic dog

Spot, from Boston Dynamics, is being trialled by National Highways, BAM Ritchies - the ground engineering division of BAM Nuttall - and AECOM.
By David Arminas March 1, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Spot the dog: last seen snuffling alongside an English motorway, travelling through brush, trees and other vegetation (image courtesy National Highways)

National Highways says it has been using Spot, a “robotic dog”, for surveying the agency’s land adjacent to motorways in southwest England.

Spot, a 25kg creation from Boston Dynamics, is being trialled by National Highways, BAM Ritchies - the ground engineering division of BAM Nuttall - and AECOM to inform forthcoming operational work. The robotic dog’s eye view is being employed to capture data remotely in difficult-to-reach locations and across various terrains alongside the motorway and major A roads, according to national Highways.

These access-constrained sites include steep-sided embankments and natural slopes, slopes beneath tree canopies or otherwise obscured by vegetation, culverts and under bridges and other structures. These are areas where it is difficult and sometimes unsafe for geotechnical inspectors to reach.

Spot is to help meet the standards set out in the UK’s Design Manual for Roads and Bridges and reduce the frequency of physical walkover surveys by inspectors and the need for costly and disruptive traffic management.

Boston Dynamics is an American engineering and robotics design company founded in 1992 as a spin-off from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and whose parent company is now Hyundai Motor Company. The company creates advanced robots that mimic human and animal movements. Boston Dynamics’ other robots include BigDog, Atlas and Handle. Since 2019, Spot has been commercially available, making it the first commercially available robot from Boston Dynamics.

National Highways, a wholly government-owned company, said that Spot has been put through its paces by the AECOM and BAM teams at its Development Centre at Moreton-in-Marsh last summer. The robotic dog’s capabilities were tested over a number of highways settings, across differing ground conditions and on earthworks of various gradients, heights and materials.

The four-legged robot’s first ‘live trial’ was alongside the M5 in Somerset county, using cameras and a Leica BLK ARC lidar scanner. National Highways said it is keen to explore and test the technology further throughout the year.

“The initial proof-of-concept testing has been encouraging and we’re now live-trialling the robotic tool with a view to using it with our contractors in future survey work,” said Guy Swains, engineering manager with National Highways’ South West Geotechnical team.

“It’s about finding the right applications and the team is focused on realising Spot’s potential,” said Matt Ewing, business development manager with BAM Ritchies.

The trials follow several National Highways research and development projects led by the ARUP/AECOM consortium, to better integrate remote survey techniques into geotechnical asset management practice.

The initiative comes within months of National Highways, the University of Cambridge and supply chain companies launching the Roads Research Alliance to shape the development of innovation within the highways industry over the next five years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asset management can be optimised with new technology
    August 22, 2013
    An array of asset management technologies and capabilities are now available to help clients optimise infrastructure assessments. Global survey and geotechnical group, Fugro, has signed a multi-year agreement with Dutch pavement consultant, KOAC•NPC. This move will see the firms combine capabilities to undertake highway surface condition contracts in the Netherlands. Under the agreement, Fugro will collect surface condition data using its ARAN road scanning vehicle. KOAC•NPC, will carry out the post pro
  • Shortlist announced for UK’s Roads for the Future competition
    May 30, 2018
    The UK’s National Infrastructure Commission has shortlisted five companies including Aecom and Arup in a competition for ideas to make roads fit for driverless cars. The five companies were chosen from 81 entries submitted to the Roads for the Future initiative led by the roads authority Highways England and Innovate UK, a government agency that encourages research and innovation in many sectors. Aecom is examining how smart traffic signals could advise drivers as to a speed they should be driving if they
  • 3D PAVING comes to India and is boosting slipforming efficiency
    December 19, 2016
    Situated on India’s northern frontier, the state of Jammu and Kashmir is world-renowned for its aesthetic vistas and captivating landscapes. The arterial roads connecting the city of Jammu to that of Srinagar is a challenge to maintain, being constantly exposed to harsh weather and overburdened with vehicular movement. Leica Geosystems has been involved in the Chenani-Nashri tunnel project, India’s longest road tunnel and which will be part of an alternate route in the region
  • Barrier innovation putting traffic safety and flow first
    April 3, 2014
    Cutting-edge barriers offering greater safety at the same time as limiting traffic disruption are proving in demand on busy world highways, as Guy Woodford reports Small footprint; minimum disruption after impact; lower labour costs; all said to be elements contributing to the growing popularity of the Trend terminal from Trinity Highway Products. This family of end terminals offers a range of safe and efficient solutions to barrier ends with quick and easy assembly and installation. Trinity claims th