Skip to main content

Amey trials gully sensors in UK to help prevent road flooding

Engineering and public services provider Amey is installing state-of-the-art sensors into gullies on UK highways in a trial aimed at preventing the flooding of roads.
November 25, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Engineering and public services provider Amey is installing state-of-the-art sensors into gullies on UK highways in a trial aimed at preventing the flooding of roads.

Excessive rainfall can lead to highways becoming flooded, especially if drains are blocked with silt and waste, increasing road surface damage.

Most local councils and road authorities inspect gullies - drainage pits covered by an open metal grating often located on the road edge - on a cyclical or risk-based basis. Efforts might be focused on gullies that are prone to flooding. However, there has not been a method that allows councils and their contractors to understand in real time when a gully is getting blocked.

In the southern English county of Hampshire, Amey is installing what they describe as “live sensors” into gullies. The sensors measure the level of silt and water inside the drainage pit, feeding this information instantly back to a control centre managed by Amey via web-based, mapped, visualisation software.

This software couples weather forecasting with silt levels to advise administration the possibility of a gully flooding over the following days. Workers can then clean the gully in question, thereby avoiding the need for subsequent emergency – and expensive - attendances.

Amey director Paul Anderson said the technology allows for proactive rather than reactive maintenance. “We have installed 25 sensors in known high-risk gullies and are currently collecting information at these sites. If these sensors works as well as we hope they will, then it could lead to a radically different approach in Hampshire and elsewhere.”

Rob Humby, a member of the council’s environment and transport group, said the sensors should help establish an inventory of each gully which will show when and where maintenance resources are best directed.

Related Content

  • California traffic management system using simulation has successful trial
    May 16, 2014
    A complex online modelling system for integrating traffic management on the southern Californian road system has successfully completed a major operational trial this spring The "decision support system" uses the collection of data about the local interstate I-15 and many of the roads which feed into it or lead away from it, to build a comprehensive picture of traffic flows, working with a variety of city agencies, federal highway administration and services such as police and crash data. Data from e
  • Vital structures
    February 10, 2012
    A wide variety of products are available to help bridge owners reduce the need for costly repairs. Bridges are one of the most expensive structures on a highway system, and their maintenance, and where necessary, repair will save millions over time. Prevention being better than cure means that anything that can be done to reduce the need for repair is a good investment. For example, a MOOG bucket-type inspection unit has been commissioned for the Naini Bridge in Allahabad in the state of Uttar Pradesh, Indi
  • Bentley Systems strikes bridge monitoring deal with AASHTO
    November 15, 2012
    A new partnership between Bentley Systems and the American Association of Highway Transportation Officials (AASHTO) looks set to yield significant cost benefits for the US. This move will see AASHTO and Bentley align to extend AASHTO’s Bridge Management software with Bentley’s Inspectech package. As a result, bridge inspection processes in the US will become more efficient, more accurate and also see major budget reductions. CEO Greg Bentley said, “In the US we spend about US$1 billion/year on bridge inspec
  • Safety trials for FORUM8 cycle simulator
    August 17, 2020
    Research by Morgan State University in the US using linked up driving and cycling simulators could help with safer urban road designs for both drivers and cyclists.