France’s first AID system has halved attendance time on the Calix Viaduct.
     
TheCentre for Traffic Engineering and Management (CIGT) at Caen in northern France manages 367km of the national network in the Manche/Calvados district including the 1.2km long, 15-span Calix Viaduct across the Canal de Caen à la Mer.
     
A sensitive point in metro Caen, the Calix Viaduct carries an average of 85,000 vehicles per day and up to 110,000 (including 5,000 heavy trucks), making this section of the RN814 one of France’s most heavily used four-lane highways. The viaduct carries four lanes but has no emergency lanes and only a 1.1m wide sidewalk to allow access to the emergency call network. 
     
In addition, the viaduct is located above a costal oil depot which has a 63,000m³ capacity and is classified as a SEVESO II high-threshold site which complicates CIGT’s job in securing the structure. It is therefore essential that CIGT can monitor and detect incidents so staff can quickly launch interventions and send information to users and public organisations: police, fire department…
     
With the traffic operator monitoring the cameras manually, the average time taken to detect and attend an incident was 40 minutes. 
     
Interdepartmental Road Management Northwest (Direction Interdépartementale de la route Nord-Ouest or DIRNO) decided to install automatic incident detection (AID) and chose a video-based system that processes streamed live video to identify incidents and accidents using image processing algorithms. Such systems have become increasingly popular for incident detection following the catastrophic Mont-Blanc tunnel fire in 1999.
     
CIGT’s system comprised eight 
     
 
As the application runs inside the camera there is  no need to stream real time video from all the cameras to the control  centre 24/7, creating a significant bandwidth saving.
     
The  image processing algorithm analyses movement within the frame and  automatically spots any stopped trajectory in the image. As the  intelligent cameras cover both the bridge and approaches, the control  centre has real-time detection of stopped vehicles, accidents and  traffic jams across the whole structure. The software automatically  handles the alarms hierarchically (to eliminate duplication) and sends  operators the information necessary to make a decision after a visual  check. They can then disseminate the exact information including the  nature and severity of the incident/accident, type of vehicle and any  closed lanes. The video clips can be used for post-incident analysis and  for identifying recurring problems.
     
Caen’s  four traffic regulation operators and maintenance technicians  investigate eight to 10 incidents this way each day and can apply  different intervention procedures. “The operators at the Centre have a  lot of responsibilities and can’t have their eye on all the monitors all  day. AID is an intelligent tool that allows them to do their work more  effectively. The previous 40-minute average intervention times have been  cut in half since our smart cams were installed,” explains DIRNO’s  Sebastien Lorin.
     
Besides  the system’s efficiency, CIGT appreciates the solution’s  interoperability as it connects directly with alert systems (panels with  variable messages and light-up signals). The operators also prefer the  image quality and reliability of detection even during the hours of  darkness, heavy rain, snow or fog. 
     
As  a pilot site financed by the Ministry of the Environment, Energy and  Seas, CIGT Caen is one of the first places in France to be equipped with  AID in intelligent cameras, and it receives regular visits from other  road management agencies. It is now considering adding additional  equipment but must first expand the geographic coverage of the fibre  optic network. 
     
However,  DIRNO has already committed to deploying smart cameras using the same  technology in Rouen’s Tunnel de la Grand Mare and that system will be  operational before the end of the year.
    
        
        
        
        



