Skip to main content

AtkinsRéalis gets Georgia DoT resilience deal

Weather events and emergency transportation planning are at the heart of new contract
By David Arminas June 18, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Various hazard, vulnerability and resilience software tools will be used to assess existing and future infrastructure (© Photovs | Dreamstime.com)

Extreme weather events and emergency transportation planning are at the heart of a new deal AtkinsRéalis has signed with Georgia Department of Transportation.

The global services and project management company has been awarded the DoT’s first Statewide Resilience Improvement Plan Support Services contract.

Under the three-year deal, AtkinsRéalis will assess risks to local communities and the economy in the face of increasing natural disasters and weather events such as flooding and wildfires. Strategies will be developed that integrate vulnerability assessment results into asset management systems with the goal of protecting state’s transportation network.

AtkinsRéalis will inventory existing resiliency and carbon reduction-oriented deployments and create a prioritisation framework to optimise the use of resources and maximise federal match benefits.

The company will recommend organisational structures to support resiliency and develop effective public outreach and messaging.

AtkinsRéalis will also support Georgia DoT's resiliency committee through support of the Carbon Reduction and Protect programme-related work, including advising about resiliency best practices.

Various hazard, vulnerability and resilience software tools will be used to assess existing and future infrastructure. Data-driven dashboards and web mapping applications will be used to enhance coordination with internal and external stakeholders.

“Our integrated, multidisciplinary team connects our resilience planning, emergency management and mitigation-focused experts with our team of professional engineering, disaster response and recovery and support specialists,” said Brad Dennard, senior vice president for AtkinsRéalis’s work with US departments of transportation.

AtkinsRéalis has supported the state’s department of transportation for more than 35 years and managed and delivered 30 on-call contracts across Georgia since 2000. The company has developed more than 80 state, regional and local hazard mitigation plans throughout the state supporting initiatives by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Floodplain Management Program, including the Georgia Flood Map Modernisation Program and development of the Georgia Resiliency Blueprint for nearly two decades.

AtkinsRéalis has supported the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Army Corps of Engineers and the departments of transportation for the states of North Carolina and Florida through various on-call contracts. Work performed includes planning, design and programme management services encompassing resilience studies, feasibility studies, transportation studies, safety studies, engineering analysis and design and environmental services.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Next-gen NaviGAtor 511 travel information system launched
    May 18, 2012
    The Georgia Department of Transportation, home of one of the most popular, heavily used real-time traveller information systems in the US, has unveiled the next generation of Georgia NaviGAtor 511. The new system brings new features and, through a public-private partnership, new sponsors, allowing the Department and its 511 provider, Meridian Environmental Technology, an Iteris company, to operate and maintain the system at no cost to Georgia taxpayers.
  • Utah statewide deal for Causeway One.network Live Link
    May 28, 2025
    Operators can use app to communicate lane closures to drivers
  • USDOT to fund New York, New Jersey transit systems upgrades
    September 23, 2014
    US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx has announced that 40 projects have been competitively selected to receive a share of US$3.59 billion in federal disaster relief funds to help public transportation systems in the areas affected by Hurricane Sandy to become more resilient, in order to withstand the impact of future natural disasters. Approximately 90 per cent of the funds will be invested in resilience projects primarily in New York and New Jersey, where transit systems sustained the worst of the
  • Safety first in the Big Apple
    August 19, 2022
    For a variety of reasons, seniors are particularly vulnerable to traffic violence – but better road design can help. Adam Hill examines New York City’s new plan to keep older people from becoming collision statistics