 
     An impending move to free-flow charging prompted a search for automated dangerous goods identification and over-height detection systems at the Thames Crossing to the east of London.
     
Manned toll booths are increasingly being consigned to history by the onslaught of all-electronic charging. 
     
However, a secondary function of the traditional manned plazas has been to prevent non-compliant vehicles using the facility or to tell a driver that that they need to use a specific lane or wait for an escort. 
     
Automating these secondary functions can make the move to open road charging considerably more complicated. 
     
A prime example is on London’s orbital motorway, the M25, at the Dartford Crossing where the 
     
Although traditional open road solutions were suitable for the southbound side where vehicles cross the bridge, something different was needed for the northbound carriageways to prevent unescorted Hazchem and over-height vehicles entering the tunnels.
     
David Cook, on-road transition lead for Dart Charge at operator Connect Plus Services, which runs the crossing on behalf of the Highways Agency, highlighted the significance of the change saying: “Dangerous goods vehicles have to leave the motorway and self-declare at the Kent marshalling area. Previously drivers that failed to self-declare were diverted to the marshalling area by the booth operators.” 
 
When the convoy was ready to move, all the barriers  at the old toll plaza were held in the lowered position to allow the  normal northbound traffic to clear before the trucks carrying dangerous  goods were escorted through the left bore. Once they the escorted trucks  had cleared the tunnel the barriers reverted to their normal operation.
     
But  those checks and safeguards were to be swept away in the move to  free-flow charging. Erwan Huerre, transition director for Dart Charge at  Connect Plus, sums up the situation saying: “We were moving from a  non-permissive system where everything was stopped, to a permissive  system where only non-compliant vehicles are stopped. So it was  necessary to devise methods to detect and intercept non-compliant  vehicles.”
     
There were  further legacy-based complications as Gareth Hopkins, project manager  for Dart Charge with Connect Plus Services, explained: “The older  left-hand [west] tunnel is smaller with only 4.8m [15ft 9”] of headroom  while the later right-hand [east] bore is a full 5m [16ft 6”]. As we  drive on the left in the UK and vehicles move to the left when not  overtaking, most heavy trucks approach the crossing in the left hand  lanes so the tunnels are the ‘wrong way round’ with the taller tunnel on  the right.”
     
While there were advisory signs showing  the height limit, truck drivers are not infallible and the booth  operators were very alert to this problem. The operators would hold all  the traffic at the barriers and instruct the over-height vehicle’s  driver to move across to the right hand bore.   
     
With  the impending loss of the manned booths, Connect Plus Services worked  with French tolling specialist 
 
The  height–warning signage has been changed from advisory to regulatory  and  in the revised road layout northbound drivers have to select  whether to  use the right or left hand bore immediately after the last  junction at  about 800m from the tunnel entrance. From that point  onwards, the lanes  for the left- and right-hand bores are now  segregated. 
     
To  prevent  unaccompanied dangerous goods vehicles entering the tunnel, a  system  that detects and reads the Hazchem boards has been devised. This  uses  14 cameras which detect both the dedicated white and mixed load   (orange) Hazchem ADR plates and reads the letters and symbols which   specify the load. But this was not achieved without difficulties as   Hopkins explains: “The lower contrast orange background makes the   letters more difficult to read and many of the plates are hinged so they   can be closed when the vehicle is not carrying hazardous goods. But  the  software initially interpreted the hinge as letters or symbols.”
     
If   a dangerous goods truck driver does not self-declare and continues   towards the tunnels, the cameras detect the ADR plates and an ANPR   camera captures the non-compliant vehicle’s registration. This activates   a set of traffic lights downstream on the relevant carriageways to   bring the traffic to a halt as barriers descend across the lanes. The   vehicle’s registration and a multi-lingual warning are displayed on a   variable message sign by the barriers which repeatedly rise and fall to   meter vehicles through until the non-compliant vehicle is at the front.   At that point only the barrier in front of the non-compliant vehicle  is  raised and the driver directed to the marshalling area to join the  next  convoy.
     
Above the   segregated lanes an over-height detection system shines a beam across   the carriageway at the appropriate height for the respective bores. In   addition, the Sick detectors (along with technology from Covill) used to   classify vehicles for charging purposes are also able to detect   over-height and over-length vehicles. The same process of lights and   barriers is used to hold and meter the traffic to separate and turn back   the over-height vehicle through the marshalling area.  
 
Huerre   describes the process: “Previously we didn’t want to cause  errant   drivers more pain so the booth operators helped them through  the   crossing by holding all the traffic and getting them across to the    right-hand bore. Now there is a change of philosophy. We have given  them   [truck drivers] information through the signage so we expect them  to   comply and get into the correct lane - and if they don’t we won’t  make   it simple for them. Now we impose a fine and also a delay by  sending   over-height vehicles back to Junction 1A in order that the  driver can   select the correct lane the second time around.”
     
The    marshalling area is being enlarged to increase capacity and provide    flexibility by using some of the land freed up by removing the    northbound toll plaza. When the escorted Hazchem convoy is ready to move    off, the lights and barriers are used to hold the northbound traffic    heading for the left-hand (west) bore, to provide both the room and  time   for trucks to safely complete the crossing. Vehicle using the    right-hand bore continue as normal throughout the convoy process. 
     
In    view of the volume of traffic using the crossing and the implications    of any technology failure or malfunction, six months before they were    due to go live the systems were assembled and tested on a disused    airfield. “Technically all the equipment worked well with the exception    of the Hazchem recognition system,” said Hopkins. 
     
Changes    to the software within the Hazchem recognition’s machine vision  system   allows it to ‘ignore’ the hinge line and overcome this problem.  Once  all  the technology was working correctly and tested, the systems  were   dismantled and transferred to the gantries leading up to the  tunnels. 
     
A   
     
In    the interim period before the construction was completed, the   free-flow  charging was started and the northbound traffic was   segregated into  lanes heading for the left and right bores. However,   before the  construction was finished the segregated lanes were diverted   through the  unused southbound toll plaza with the barriers ‘nodding’   to regulate  the lanes of converging traffic.
     
    This provided a ‘period of education’ where drivers of non-compliant    vehicles turned back at the plaza were let off with a warning while    being left in no doubt that in future fines will be imposed for any    errors.  
     
Now, a couple of    months after the toll booths were removed, an average of 23    non-compliant trucks are stopped each day – demonstrating that the    systems work and the continuing need for the technology. A neat solution    to an unusual set of circumstances but one that others considering  the   switch to free-flow charging could find useful.   
 
 
     
         
        



