Skip to main content

Kistler installs 'world's largest digital WiM site' in smallest US state

Forty Lineas digital quartz sensors cover 10 lanes on bridge in Rhode Island
By Adam Hill September 5, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Kistler team installs sensors flush with the road surface on Washington Bridge in Providence (image: Kistler Group)

Kistler is to install what it says is the largest digital Weigh In Motion (WiM) site in the world, with 40 Lineas digital quartz sensors covering 10 traffic lanes.

The company is carrying out the work for Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDoT) to protect the structural health of Washington Bridge in the city of Providence. Rhode Island is the smallest state by area in the US.

Currently, the north span of the Washington Bridge is being removed and a new span is planned. To keep traffic moving during the north span restoration project, two traffic lanes were added to the south span. 

Kistler says the load rating on the south span is adequate, but installing its structural health monitoring (SHM) solution means RIDoT will be able to evaluate in real time whether the additional traffic load is having an adverse impact.

“Bridges talk to us,” observes JT Kirkpatrick, Kistler head of sales, traffic solutions. 

“We have the ability to hear and interpret every sound, even nearly inaudible sounds, emitted from a bridge that signal structural distress. This will enable us to work with RIDoT to proactively monitor the bridge’s structural health in real-time so they can take action to preserve this vital structure.”

WiM sensors are placed just under the surface of the bridge’s roadway, and the system also includes charge amplifiers to condition electrical signals from the sensors, data loggers to process data in real time and LPR cameras to identify trucks by their class size and monitor for overweight wheel, axle and gross vehicle weight (GVW) loads.

The sensor-based SHM solution will enable RIDoT to perform predictive analyses and more timely preventative maintenance, Kistler insists.

Measuring equipment — accelerometers, strain gauges, temperature sensors, inclinometers and a meteorology station — will measure, collect and interpret bridge health data.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Lidar lets planners see big picture in Chattanooga
    April 14, 2025
    The city of Chattanooga, Tennessee, is attempting to make its streets safer by using the largest deployment of Lidar-based traffic detection in the US. Adam Hill reports…
  • National funding cuts cause fragmentation of US ITS market
    February 1, 2012
    Paul Everett, Research Director with IMS Research, looks at how ITS deployment varies across the US and what this means in terms of market potential for systems manufacturers and suppliers At the end of 2010, the US will have a total resident population of close to 310 million, rising to an estimated 439 million by 2050.
  • Radar reinforces detection efficiency
    March 16, 2016
    Radar can have distinct advantages in some transport-related situations as Colin Sowman found out during a visit to Navtech Radar. Despite tremendous advances in machine vision techniques, the accuracy and reliability of camera-based detection systems suffer during periods of poor visibility where other technologies may offer an alternative. Radar is one such technology. It too has seen significant development in recent years and according to Navtech Radar, the technology can often fulfil detection and moni
  • WEBINAR: Wejo & Waycare data helps US roads
    August 10, 2021
    Companies use CV data to respond to traffic incidents: case study will look at Bay Area