Skip to main content

Managing road hazards is key to £90,000 competition

England's National Highways has chosen nine companies to receive innovation funding
By Adam Hill March 22, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Artificial intelligence could help prevent road hazards (© Oleksandr Bilyi | Dreamstime.com)

VivaCity and Valerann are among nine companies receiving funds to develop ideas to better manage hazards on major roads.

The finalists in the innovation competition from England's National Highways will receive up to £90,000 to develop their concepts and improve safety.

Hazards could range from unsafe driving to potholes, and from flooding to obstructions in the road.

The winning ideas include using 3D radar technology to predict weather-related road hazards, AI road monitoring technology that can be used by traffic control centres, traffic officers or in inspector vehicles and virtual reality training courses for drivers.

The competition was aimed at small or medium enterprises that may not have worked with National Highways before "and could have as yet undiscovered, innovation gems to share around dealing with hazards".

The companies will be offered coaching and mentoring, business development opportunities and technical and procurement support.

Erika Lewis, chief executive at Connected Places Catapult, says: “We’re very pleased to be working alongside National Highways to support these small businesses to develop proposals to trial their technologies. By bridging the gap between small businesses and large infrastructure clients we’re able to support the development of fresh ideas and support the commercialisation of new technologies.”

The finalists will now get funding of £15,000 to £30,000 to design their trials. After that, five projects will be awarded up to £60,000 to deliver their trials.

National Highways technology programme portfolio manager James Gibson says: "We are very optimistic that these schemes will be able to improve safety and help prevent people coming to harm on our roads.”

 

What are the nine projects?

 

Esitu Solutions (based in Nottingham) will be developing a virtual reality training course as a downloadable app for the Meta Quest headset to promote safer and more considerate driving
 

Vesos (Devon) developed TeCall to harvest eCall data automatically sent after collisions. TeCall fuses other hazard alerts, adds vehicle make and model, propulsion and can identify if vulnerable drivers are on board
 

Pram (Dublin) is an integrated solution that predicts weather-related and surface condition hazards on the network and is based on 3D radar technology widely used in the automotive industry
 

VivaCity (London) sensors provide data on interactions between road users, enabling a proactive response to an increased rate of near misses

 

Roadside Technologies (Chesterfield) is developing an automated hazardous object detection solution using the latest in sensing technology, to improve road user safety and enable smoother journeys through temporary workzones on roads

 

CrossTech (Wiltshire) has developed a stopped vehicle detection verification system. The platform builds on the automated computer vision inspection platform from the rail industry, called Hubble
 

Route Reports (London) is a video analytics-based road monitoring device that can be fitted to any National Highways vehicle in order to automatically detect hazards
 

TransPix (Hull) uses video analytics and computer vision technology to improve road and workplace safety by detecting complex behaviours and hazards
 

Valerann (London) has developed an AI real-time road data analytics platform fuses data from a broad range of data sources to deliver road traffic situation insights and accidents risk modelling, improving road traffic authorities’ situational awareness and empowering them to take accurate, actionable and timely decisions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Developments in software visualisation packages
    February 3, 2012
    Adrian Greeman looks at developments in software visualisation packages. The capacity to make visualisations has been growing in importance over the last decade, and is now a well-accepted part of consultations and client presentations. But making high-quality images of projects is still a major undertaking and larger consultancies employ specialist departments to do so. Costs are coming down but it can still take a while, and some high-capacity hardware, to produce realistic renderings from drawings and 3D
  • Vivacity Labs rolls out AI-controlled junctions 
    November 13, 2020
    Initiative in Manchester, UK, is designed to facilitate higher levels of non-vehicle movements
  • Hello LA! It's showtime!
    September 19, 2022
    Welcome to this year’s ITS World Congress, organised by RX Global. Jaime McAuley, the company’s event director, provides some highlights of what will be an amazing and unforgettable show
  • PTV sets its sights on Smart City solutions
    February 9, 2017
    Making a city smarter not only relies on understand technological opportunities but also human decision-making, as Miller Crockart explains. Cities are about people – a fact that can easily be forgotten when experts talk about roads, healthcare and education as though they are abstract and unconnected monoliths rather than things people use. Understanding how and why people use services is vital for making decisions on how they can be optimised for maximum efficiency across inter-connected networks that for