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

  • Reversible express lanes and open road tolling combat congestion
    March 2, 2012
    Teri England, Diamond Consulting Services, details the construction of construction of a world first - reversible express lanes with cashless multi-lane ORT - on the Tampa Hillsborough Expressway
  • In-vehicle vision-based systems and autonomous vehicles
    January 11, 2013
    The Artificial Vision and Intelligent Systems Laboratory (VisLab) of Italy’s Parma University has built itself a fine pedigree in basic and applied research which has developed machine vision algorithms and intelligent systems for the automotive field. In 1998, a VisLab-equipped Lancia Thema named ‘Argo’ travelled along the famous Mille Miglia race route and completed 98 per cent of it autonomously using then-current technology. In 2005, VisLab provided the vision element of the Terramax, a collaborative un
  • Future of tolling: the priorities
    January 14, 2020
    In the final part of his investigation into the future of tolling technology, Josef Czako of Moving Forward Consulting asks what industry figures see as the priorities going forward…
  • Cooperative systems and privacy not mutually exclusive
    February 1, 2012
    Are co-operative systems and personal privacy mutually exclusive? Not necessarily, says Neil Hoose. But the more advanced the application, the greater the concession of privacy may have to become. ITS Stockholm in 2009 and the Cooperative Mobility Showcase event which took place alongside Intertraffic in Amsterdam in March this year both featured live, on-street demonstrations of safety and driver information applications that used Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) and Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communications,