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

  • A virtual virtuous circle
    January 18, 2021
    Virtual sensors will allow a safer driving experience and reduce road maintenance costs. Tactile Mobility’s Eitan Grosbard talks to David Arminas
  • Data collection key to software developments
    February 13, 2012
    The collection and handling of data are key technology drivers in the software sector. New methods of data collection and manipulation are driving significant developments in software at present. The latest technology allows designers and engineers to collect, store and manipulate ever larger amounts of data. Growing use of mobile field equipment for both data collection and field management is driving interactive systems. And in an interview this month Autodesk senior vice-president for the construction an
  • Iterchimica trials more Gipave in Oxfordshire
    November 23, 2023
    Another trial of Iterchimica’s graphene-enhanced Gipave technology gets underway in the English county of of Oxfordshire.
  • A virtual virtuous circle
    March 19, 2021
    Virtual sensors will allow a safer driving experience and reduce road maintenance costs. Tactile Mobility’s Eitan Grosbard talks to David Arminas