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

  • Conduit intelligence for smart transportation
    July 25, 2025

    Let’s face it, existing roads, bridges and traffic systems weren’t designed for digital retrofitting. Trenching and boring through roads and pavements is disruptive, labour-intensive and expensive. As communication cabling needs surge across ITS corridors, the ability to easily maximise conduit space, minimise disruption, and future-proof networks becomes essential.

  • Weigh in Motion gets smarter
    January 4, 2023
    Weigh in Motion technology is at the forefront of protecting road surfaces and helping enforcement activity – but could it also play a key role in the development of Smart Cities?
  • Webinar: AI and road asset management
    May 12, 2021
    Vaisala RoadAI creates faster, more detailed, accurate and cost-effective road condition surveys
  • Nairobi looks to ITS to ease travel problems
    December 21, 2017
    Shem Oirere looks at plans to tackle chronic congestion in the Kenyan capital. Traffic jams in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, are estimated to cost the country $360 million a year in terms of lost man-hours, fuel and pollution. According to Wilfred Oginga, an engineer with the Kenya Urban Roads Authority (KURA), the congestion has been exacerbated by poor regulation and enforcement of traffic rules, absence of adequate traffic management systems and poor utilisation of existing road facilities.