Skip to main content

C-ITS focus on new Italian highway

Pedemontana Lombarda Highway project in north of Italy will contain smart technology
By Mike Woof September 8, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
New highway stretches will benefit from the latest smart technology to monitor structures and ensure timely maintenance as well as for coping with AVs (image credit: Webuild)

Cooperative ITS (C-ITS) and autonomous vehicle (AV) technology will be a key part of a new road project in Italy.

Webuild has been awarded a majority stake in the contract for key stretches of the Pedemontana Lombarda Highway project in the north of the country. The €1.26 billion contract will see the firm designing and building two sections of highway. 

Section B2 will be 12.7km long, running between Lentate sul Seveso and Cesano Maderno. Meanwhile, Section C will be 20km long, running between Cesano Maderno and Milan’s A51 eastern beltway. 

The new sections of the Pedemontana Lombarda will have smart technology to allow them to receive self-driving vehicles in the future. The sections will have C-ITS to facilitate communication between vehicles and the highway itself. 

Features will include an alert system for accidents, road work and vehicle obstruction; the transmission of speed limits and other driving information to onboard dashboards; and the collection of traffic data.

Webuild will head the consortium handling the contract handling and holds a 70% stake. Meanwhile, Pizzarotti is also a partner.

These sections of highway are to benefit from smart technology that will help with infrastructure maintenance, among other features.

Commissioned by Autostrada Pedemontana Lombarda with Concessioni Autostradali Lombarde as grantor, the project is to be completed for the 2026 Winter Olympics that will be hosted between Milan and Cortina. 

Once completed, it is seen supporting an increase in revenue among the local industry of an estimated €4.4 billion in 10 years. Part of the project will also have Webuild clean up areas still suffering from the 1976 industrial chemical disaster in Seveso.

The project will also have installed along the two sections a diagnostic system to monitor potential weaknesses, weight loads, vibrations and temperatures in order to reduce the risk of possible damage to the infrastructure.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Toyota proving ground tests co-operative ITS
    February 25, 2013
    Opened in November 2012, Toyota’s intelligent transportation systems (ITS) proving ground is being used to run a number of interactive tests between specially-equipped Toyota vehicles. Located at the company's Higashi-Fuji Technical Centre in Susono City, Japan, the ITS proving ground is a 3.5-hectare site that faithfully replicates a real urban environment, complete with intersecting streets, pedestrian crosswalks, and traffic signals. It is equipped with optical beacons, government-allocated 760 MHz trans
  • 'Smart' motorways on their way to Greater Manchester
    November 8, 2013
    Details of a multi-million pound project have been unveiled that will cut congestion and improve journey times on parts of the M60 and M62 in Greater Manchester. The smart motorways scheme – the first of its kind in the north-west – will be introduced on a 17-mile stretch of the network between junction 8 of the M60 near Sale and junction 20 of the M62 near Rochdale. The system will use the latest technology to monitor traffic levels, provide traffic information to road users, and ease congestion by usin
  • The long road to Spanish enlightenment
    October 22, 2018
    Julián Núñez, immediate past president of ASECAP, gets his teeth into the vision of a European strategy for toll roads. David Arminas reports from Madrid. Getting European politicians to agree to a long-term cross-border highway infrastructure programme for toll roads is extremely difficult. It’s a bit like pulling teeth: people want to avoid the pain. But pain is something that Spanish operators, including Abertis, OHL, ACS, FCC and Acciona, have been going through for the past decade. The country has
  • Work to begin on North Virginia highway improvements to ease congestion
    August 2, 2016
    Work will begin this summer on the first major improvements to US Interstate 66 inside the Capital Beltway, Virginia, in 15 years. The Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) project is part of a comprehensive initiative to transform the I-66 corridor, giving commuters and other travellers a variety of fast and reliable choices for getting to and from work. Toll revenues will fund multimodal improvements, giving commuters expanded options for travel. To jumpstart the process, the Commonwealth Transp