Skip to main content

Safer with 3i Innovation’s lighting for Mount Victoria Tunnel

In New Zealand, 3i Innovation's on-road markers and Tunnel Guidance markers are providing emergency evacuation lighting for the refurbished iconic Mount Victoria tunnel in the capital city Wellington.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
3i in Wellington’s Victoria Tunnel

In New Zealand, 151 3i Innovation's on-road markers and Tunnel Guidance markers are providing emergency evacuation lighting for the refurbished iconic Mount Victoria tunnel in the capital city Wellington.

The 85-year-old State Highway 1 tunnel is a part of the route from Wellington Airport to the rest of the country’s North Island. It also connects the eastern suburbs to the central city and beyond. The extensive upgrade started in April 2015 and was completed in June.

Upgrade includes energy efficient LED 'intelligent' systems. Lights dim and brighten at the portals in response to outdoor light.

Conditions for driving through the tunnel have been improved with 1,000 light-reflecting white panels beside the carriageway, a new paint palette and inductively powered LED road markers along the sides and centreline. The panels are fire-resistant, adding to the tunnel’s safety profile.

The LED road delineators - are electronically programmed to pulse and strobe in sequence toward the exits in an emergency, guiding people safely out. The system is a world-first use of delineators to this extent, according to the agency.

3i’s work on the project included the supply and commissioning of 124 Tunnel Guidance Markers, 64 Tunnel Lane Markers and associated power supplies - 2x IPL1200i and 1x IPH2000i – along with customised firmware for the emergency modes.

The Tunnel Lane Markers in the centre line provide greater safety through stronger delineation and alignment - critical for the management of bi-directional tunnels, says 3i.

During normal conditions the markers are on standby at a dimmed light output. In the event of an emergency the markers will turn on and cascade towards the safest exit to guide pedestrians out of the tunnel.

Emergency mode activation causes the LED road and edge markers to cascade towards the nearest safe exit.

The tunnel has also been repainted inside and out with a colour scheme that features light blue inside the portals and along the walkway, soft white on the lower walls and new carriageway wall panels, as well as black on the ceiling.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Innovation in road design and management software
    February 17, 2012
    The emphasis on data processing and re-use, continues to grow in the development of design and management software. The interoperability of software, the need to handle and process larger amounts of data, and re-use and retention of data sets from one task to another have been a growing emphasis in the past few years. It allows infrastructure companies to get better value from expensively collected information and to focus more on the whole life cycle of projects.
  • Rural road resurfacing to boost safety
    October 21, 2016
    Rebuilding a local road in southern Germany will provide users with a safer route, particularly in poor weather conditions. Black Forest-based contractor Waltersbacher has used a tracked AFT 500 asphalt paver from Ammann to resurface a local road in the municipality of Glatten, near Baiersbronn. The contractor has used a number of smaller Ammann compaction units in the past. So when it won the contract to upgrade the road the firm opted to buy the AFT 500 to handle this work, as well as other jobs r
  • Positive finding for tunnel solution in Malta
    May 2, 2012
    A preliminary study on the proposed tunnel connecting the islands of Malta and Gozo has been carried out by Mott Macdonald. Mott Macdonald’s preliminary analysis of the Malta-Gozo undersea road link suggests that it would take 5-7 years to build a tunnel between the two islands. This report suggests a cost of €156-€492 million for a single bore three-lane tunnel on the shortest practical alignment route. Potentially, the project could be co-financed by the EU under the Cohesion Fund if a road tunnel link be
  • Long-lasting surface repairs for Avonmouth Bridge
    July 9, 2012
    Two technologies combined to give a heavily used bridge a new surface that should last for years The Avonmouth Bridge carries the M5 motorway over the River Avon, and is a vital part of the road infrastructure in south-west England, linking the counties of Somerset, Devon and Cornwall to the rest of the country. Completed in 1973, it carries commuters to the city of Bristol, and to South Wales, along with holidaymakers. The 1.4km long steel box girder bridge comprising a 16,000m2 steel decked central span a