Skip to main content

Temporary CCTV poses more challenges than permanent installations

Long-term roadworks pose particular problems for temporary surveillance installations. Converting the hard shoulder to a running lane, either full- or part-time, is the UK Highways Agency’s solution to ease motorway congestion. This is leading to a number of long-term projects where large stretches of the hard shoulder are closed off by temporary concrete barriers and during these roadwork programmes, temporary CCTV cameras are deployed to monitor and record vehicle traffic and workers.
June 12, 2015 Read time: 4 mins
Frank Gearon installing feeds to the ‘Wonderbox’ for another temporary CCTV system.

Long-term roadworks pose particular problems for temporary surveillance installations.

Converting the hard shoulder to a running lane, either full- or part-time, is the 1841 UK Highways Agency’s solution to ease motorway congestion. This is leading to a number of long-term projects where large stretches of the hard shoulder are closed off by temporary concrete barriers and during these roadwork programmes, temporary CCTV cameras are deployed to monitor and record vehicle traffic and workers.

Designing and implementing a number of these temporary CCTV monitoring systems for such projects is 7692 P&D Specialist Services. Current projects include 78 cameras along a 33km section of the M1 (Junctions 15-19), 109 cameras along 31km of the M3 (Junctions 2-4a) and 142 cameras on a 35km stretch of the M60 and M62 motorways around Manchester.

In April 2015 work started on a new section of ‘managed motorway’ along 23km of the M1 (Junctions 32-35a) where the hard shoulder is being converted into a running lane. As often happens with motorway projects during the construction phase the hard shoulder is inaccessible to motorists, meaning there are no emergency telephones and motorists have nowhere to stop safely and summon assistance in event of a breakdown or accident. “Before any construction work can start, temporary cameras have to be set up at regular intervals along the length of the work zone to monitor the area and detect breakdowns, accidents or incidents. That’s where the CCTV solutions we deliver come in,” says Frank Gearon, project manager of highway industry specialist P&DSS, “The aim is to deliver a real-time overview of the entire stretch of works and link all the images from the cameras back to the 24/7 manned control room.”

The company is a NICEIC contractor certified under the Highways Agency’s Sector Scheme Approval to carry out electrical works on the motorway network. At the start of this latest M1 project, it will initially deploy 30 CCTV cameras and that number will eventually double as the project progresses. Images from the cameras are streamed to a temporary monitoring station where they are also recorded, and because construction work cannot start until the cameras are working, Gearon says speed of deployment and system reliability are paramount.

“We use fibre optic cables to cope with the long distances involved, and AMG’s transmission equipment as it requires a smaller number of fibres which speeds splicing during installation. On some of the earlier projects we used AMG’s 3700 series and since 2013 we’ve used the AMG 9024– multi-service Ethernet switch (M-SES) series known as the ‘Wonderbox’.”

The ‘Wonderbox’ was designed to bridge legacy CCTV systems with new IP cameras and provides Layer 2 managed Ethernet functionality without having to involve third party products. By integrating low-speed serial data channels and alarm contacts, alongside analogue video, onto an Ethernet backbone it ‘bridges the gap’ between analogue and ‘IP’ technologies.

Due to the need to keep the roads open for traffic, such projects often run for 18 – 24 months so the CCTV systems have to withstand prolonged exposure to ambient weather conditions, vibration and dust so systems need to be very robust. 

However, that is not always enough as Gearon explains: “In major engineering projects like these, damage to cables and roadside equipment occurs frequently and there is a real risk of system failure, so on the M60/M62 project there was a requirement for a proprietary redundancy feature.

AMG was able to meet this need using the ‘X-ring’ to allow an unlimited number of M-SES units on each fibre loop, so sub-loops can be seamlessly added to provide redundancy protection in the case of a switch or fibre being damaged. And by integrating the dedicated video codec and RS232/RS485 into the MSES switch, video lag and control data is minimal.”

As the CCTV surveillance systems on the existing projects have operated over the winter period without a problem, the P&DSS/AMG solution appears to be lasting the distance.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The benefits of combining enforcement and traffic management
    February 27, 2013
    Jason Barnes considers how combining enforcement equipment with other traffic management technologies might benefit our future – if only the will were really in place to do so. During the ITS World Congress in Vienna in October last year, Navtech Radar and Vysion­ics ITS announced a strategic partnership that would combine the expertise of Navtech in millimetre-wave wide-area surveillance technology with Vysionics’ machine vision-based automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and average speed measurement
  • Video analytics enhances urban rail safety
    December 16, 2016
    David Crawford explores some promising innovations for North American commuters. North America is experiencing a surge in commuter rail and metro development. The US now has 75 light rail and metro networks in operation; and California, in particular, is actively exploring ways of developing the state’s existing passenger rail operations into a fully integrated system.
  • Boom times for SRL
    October 29, 2021
    SRL also offers the lighter weight Instaboom Lite or use on short duration operations,
  • CCTV technology aids fight against UK insurance fraud
    June 9, 2014
    An increasing number of UK commercial fleets are turning to in-vehicle technology for protection against the sharp rise of insurance fraud, according to CCTV vehicle company, Vision Unique Equipment (VUE). Latest figures from the Association of British Insurers reveal insurance fraud is at a record high, reaching US$2.18 billion in 2013, with US$1.3 billion of fraudulent claims attributed to car insurance. ‘Crash for cash’ car insurance scams were identified as the main contributor to a 34 per cent rise