Skip to main content

UK gets its first wrong-way slip detection installation

Drivers mistakenly travelling in the wrong direction towards traffic exiting motorways and dual carriageways will be alerted using a pioneering warning system in Scotland.
February 13, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Clearly viewed, it’s the right solution for a wrong turn

Road operator Amey commissioned Clearview Intelligence to install the country’s first wrong-way slip detection on slip roads near the villages and towns of Philpstoun, Wallyford, Tranent and Lasswade. It follows reports of numerous vehicles turning onto the slip lanes and into the path of motorists exiting the motorways and dual carriageways at high speed.

“This is the first time such a solution has been implemented in Scotland and we are proud to be the team to deliver it,” said Chris Keenan,  general manager for the Scottish region with Clearview. “By travelling the wrong way on these slip lanes drivers risk a head-on collision with motorists exiting the junction or driving into the path of three lanes of oncoming traffic if they reach the motorway carriageway.

At all locations there was a static no-entry sign and white road markings to indicate one-way traffic flow.

Clearview’s system detects vehicles incorrectly turning onto the slip road and uses vehicle activated signs to flash a no-entry warning sign to the transgressing motorist, instantly alerting them of their error.

The system uses inductive loops installed in the carriageway and Clearview’s M680 count and classify system to register the direction of vehicles travelling along the slip lanes. When it detects a vehicle travelling the wrong way, it triggers solar powered vehicle activated signs to flash a no-entry symbol ahead of the drivers, prompting them to turn around.

At both Tranent and Lasswade, Clearview’s system includes cameras and an auto-alert system from the company’s Insight software platform to notify the Traffic Scotland control centre of a potential hazard.

“Since installing the system, we have recorded incidents of drivers travelling the wrong way at each of these sites, but fortunately turning around in time to avoid colliding with traffic coming at high speeds in the opposite direction,” said Keenan.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cifa gets pumped over final work on Milan bypass
    May 14, 2015
    Truck-mounted concrete pumps from the manufacturer Cifa have been working around the clock at one of Italy’s most prestigious road infrastructure projects, the Milan Outer Bypass. The toll motorway project, known by the TEEM acronym from the Italian name Tangenziale Est Esterna di Milano, involves 32km of new carriageway consisting of three lanes in each direction in addition to an emergency lane. The route winds through agricultural land and connects the A4 highway (Milano-Venezia) in the north to the A
  • TomTom to provide real time traffic info for Dutch city
    April 11, 2012
    TomTom will provide the city of Purmerend with real time traffic information to optimise traffic flow.
  • Driver feedback signs cut speeding
    February 15, 2012
    Technology from 3M is helping reduce the incidence of speeding in the UK city of Salford.
  • Driver feedback signs cut speeding
    March 2, 2012
    Technology from 3M is helping reduce the incidence of speeding in the UK city of Salford. A series of Driver Feedback Signs from 3M, DFS 700 units, have been installed in the area to gather both information on average vehicle speeds and encourage drivers to observe the speed limits. The Urban Vision partnership between Salford City Council and Capita Symonds manages the local highways on behalf of the council and has installed 50 of the DFS 700 units in strategic locations close to schools, the entrances to