Skip to main content

Road data role for Sydney buses

Asset AI scheme sees 32 public transport buses equipped with a camera and sensor
By David Arminas July 22, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Downtown Sydney: all aboard the AI data bus (© Bundit Minramun | Dreamstime.com)

New South Wales is trialling the use of buses equipped with sensors to predict the rate of road deterioration in order to prioritise road maintenance.

Under the US$1.97 million scheme, called Asset AI, currently 32 public transport buses in the Greater Sydney area each have a camera and sensor.

The technology can be combined with local weather observations to predict the rate of deterioration, according to a statement by the New South Wales government.

The joint initiative by Transport for NSW and the Roads and Transport Directorate includes the technology being mounted onto garbage trucks.

Sam Farraway, minister for regional transport and roads, also said data is being collected outside of the city by a utility vehicle mounted with cameras scanning 100km of rural roads across the state. “We will have it out collecting data along the Great Western Highway between Lithgow and Bathurst, the Sturt Highway near Wagga Wagga and around Spring Ridge in the Upper Hunter.”

Natalie Ward, minister for metropolitan roads, said technology is revolutionising road maintenance across the state. “It’s a brilliant use of resources already on our roads. Mounting cameras and sensors onto vehicles with regular routes, like garbage trucks and public transport buses, ensures road defects are captured incidentally, including those un-reported by residents,” she said.

The NSW government says it is delivering the largest transport infrastructure programme in Australia, a  US$52.15 billion of investment over four years for projects including Sydney Metro, light rail, motorways and road upgrades that will shape the state’s cities, centres and communities for generations to come.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Speed cameras target Western Australia road toll
    January 5, 2015
    The Western Australia State Government has launched a three pronged response to the road toll on Western Australian roads in 2014. Road Safety Minister Liza Harvey said the response would target three major components of the road toll: speed; motorcycle fatalities; and country road crashes. Four additional fixed speed cameras will be installed in existing locations across the metropolitan area, bringing the total operating at all times to five.
  • Key transport bodies join forces on Greater Manchester road network
    May 19, 2015
    Highways England and Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding which will see the two bodies work in partnership to develop shared priorities and a long-term vision for motorways and key roads across the city region. The move follows the formation of Highways England earlier this year, a government-owned company with a five-year budget of over US$17 billion to invest in England’s motorways and major A roads. The new joint document aims to support economic growth in
  • GridMatrix goes back to the future in New York City
    September 25, 2023
    Legacy traffic management infrastructure doesn’t have to be a marker of the past: software upgrades can bring it into the present in a cost-effective and timely way, says Gordon Feller
  • Boost to infrastructure, autonomous cars in UK budget
    March 17, 2016
    The UK chancellor announced in his spring budget what he called the biggest investment, US$87.5 billion (£61 billion), in transport infrastructure in generations and is increasing capital investment in the transport network by 50 per cent over this Parliament compared to the last. The government plans to establish the UK as a global centre for excellence in connected and autonomous vehicles by establishing a US$24.1 million (£15 million) ‘connected corridor’ from London to Dover to enable vehicles to com