Using Vaisala RoadAI to improve rural surveys in Suffolk, U.K.

Using Vaisala RoadAI to improve rural surveys in Suffolk, U.K.
United Kingdom
Published:
Roads
Weather & Environment

The challenge: Work within a limited budget, acquire more road data

The county of Suffolk, which lies on England’s rural eastern coast, has been accustomed to slow, machine-based surveys of its vast stretches of roads. Scarce budgets mean infrequent surveys, leaving the local road network’s current condition less well known to its custodians than they would wish.

With even preventative maintenance now barely affordable, major repair and replacement work cycles are now measured in tens or even hundreds of years — nowhere near adequate for public safety or keeping roads and other highway infrastructure usable.

The solution: Road network awareness, valuable trend data

Suffolk’s highways managers limit their road assessments to what can be afforded in a given year. Far from ideal, they have surveyed A and B roads annually, C roads every four years, and unclassified roads every two years in a single direction.

Now, with Vaisala RoadAI installed on just five smartphones, they can survey almost anything they want every 6 months. The new system provides more granular road data and allows highways managers to more readily determine rates of deterioration over time — an important added capability. This is especially valuable along the county’s unclassified roads — many of which are narrow and of limited construction thickness, making them difficult to assess at all through typical machine-based surveys.

The benefits: Better data, higher frequency, less cost

Better and more frequent surveys enable Suffolk’s highways managers to take a more proactive approach to road maintenance, spotting and arresting early stages of deterioration before they become enormous resurfacing or reconstruction projects. RoadAI also eliminates the subjective interpretation arising from coarse visual inspections. Senior highways managers readily acknowledge that 10 different human inspectors might return 10 different assessments — but that isn’t the case with AI doing the work.

Looking ahead, these highways managers also realize that the use of autonomous vehicles in rural areas will depend on improved lane markings and other condition factors. With RoadAI, the impacts aren't just immediate — Suffolk is better positioned for innovations just around the corner.