Skip to main content

Vision from Fugro

Fugro Roadware has released Vision, a desktop application that offers synchronised viewing of pavement management data. As the company points out, data collection from a road network only takes on meaning once it is processed. With Vision, all data processing, visualisation, and reporting can be completed from one place, facilitating efficient management of network-level data that will enable more effective pavement management decisions.
January 30, 2012 Read time: 1 min
855 Fugro Roadware has released Vision, a desktop application that offers synchronised viewing of pavement management data. As the company points out, data collection from a road network only takes on meaning once it is processed. With Vision, all data processing, visualisation, and reporting can be completed from one place, facilitating efficient management of network-level data that will enable more effective pavement management decisions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Slow moving US road user charging programme
    July 18, 2012
    Bern Grush recently attended the Mileage-Based User Fee Conference in Austin Texas where the fledgling American landscape for Road User Charging is beginning to take shape. When I was a kid I liked to poke sticks into the ants' nests in sidewalk cracks. Ants would scatter in every conceivable direction. They ran in circles, they ran over and through each other. They screamed without logic. I was fascinated.
  • How technology is propelling the development of urban shared transport
    April 11, 2024
    Over 18 million people use ride-hailing apps in the UK alone, says Mariusz Zabrocki of Freenow
  • Mobile communications could revolutionise traffic management
    February 1, 2012
    Rudolf Mietzner looks at how machine-to-machine technologies and applications will affect the automotive sector in the coming years
  • Success of London's Olympic public transport systems
    December 4, 2012
    The Olympic flame has moved on, allowing review of the relative degrees of London’s 2012 transportation success, how it was done and with what lasting effects. Jon Masters reports. This magazine’s international position provides a good vantage point for assessing impressions left by London’s 2012 Olympic Games. On the whole, it has been only praise and congratulations heard since the closing ceremonies of the Olympic Games in August and the Paralympics in September. The events looked great and ran smoothly