Skip to main content

Causeway One.network hits the road under new name

Acquisition of One.network by Causeway Technologies enhances product portfolios
By Adam Hill May 10, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
New brand manages 'road infrastructure to improve efficiency and safety and help drive carbon savings' (© Markus Wegmann | Dreamstime.com)

Workzone and traffic management specialist One.network has changed name following acquisition by road construction group Causeway Technologies.

Causeway One.network recently released its Plan Share platform, which handles roadway construction permitting and management for agencies from end to end.

Simon Topp, chief commercial officer, says: “One.network has earned an outstanding reputation, first in the UK where its solutions are ubiquitous, and now in the US where we are doing groundbreaking work to keep drivers and workzone crews safe."

Causeway has a similar reputation in road construction management, software and innovation, he adds, which means bringing these two brands together as Causeway one.network "only amplifies that reputation". 

Over the last three years in the US market, Causeway one.network has worked with major agencies including Florida Department of Transportation to deploy workzone software solutions.

These include Live Link, which allows crews to update workzone status, lane closures and detours direct from the job site, with that information then pushed on to major navigation app providers including Google Maps and Waze. 

Causeway Technologies is one of Europe’s leading highway construction and maintenance software companies, whose solutions range from budget management to construction site design and traffic management. 

Causeway founder and CEO Phil Brown said the new brand will highlight customer value. “Combining One.network with Causeway’s current infrastructure asset management solutions, including Causeway Alloy and Horizons, will streamline critical processes and deliver compelling insights to our customers,” he said. 

“The integration of One.network’s digital roadwork planning capabilities will significantly enhance our product portfolio and offer an unrivalled experience in managing the road infrastructure to improve efficiency and safety and help drive carbon savings. We look forward to a fruitful collaboration that will bring great value to our mutual clients."

Related Content

  • ARTBA president: what happened to the hoverboards?
    October 28, 2019
    What keeps Dave Bauer up at night? David Arminas caught up with the head of ARTBA at his Washington, DC office during daylight hours Dave Bauer doesn’t really have many sleepless nights. He might sleep, though, with one eye open, just in case. “We have become a much more divided country politically,” says Bauer, president of ARTBA – American Road and Transportation Builders Association. “Whether you are thinking about federal government, or state or local government, there’s a hostility now in our politi
  • Missouri’s smart solution for rural road monitoring
    July 7, 2017
    David Crawford sees how Missouri is using commercially available information to rapidly improve monitoring and driver information on rural highways. Missouri is a predominantly rural state with the second largest number of farms in the country and agriculture the main occupation in 97 of its 114 counties. US statistics starkly reveal how road accidents in rural areas tend to be more serious than in urban regions and of the 32,000 US motorists killed each year, 54% die on roads in rural areas even though onl
  • Optibus and Stoneridge agree deals with Volvo Buses
    July 29, 2024
    Swedish OEM says digital services play an important role in business strategy
  • Setting new Horizons for highways maintenance
    February 12, 2013
    Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council (MBC) is targeting priority highways maintenance schemes with strategic support from Yotta DCL, whose consultants used its web-based Horizons visualised asset management software to create works programmes for the carriageway and footway network across Rochdale’s four townships and their wards. This latest contract builds on previous work done by Yotta DCL, including coarse visual inspections (CVI), scanner surveys, footway network surveys and video asset inventory coll