Skip to main content

TRL drives National Highways update

England's roads agency to replace 20-year-old asset managment software
By David Arminas May 3, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
P-AMS will form part of National Highway’s Asset Management Transformation plan

England’s National Highways agency has commissioned TRL Software to provide it with a new pavement asset management system known as P-AMS. 

TRL – Transport Research Laboratories - said that P-AMS will be configured upon the cloud-based product iROADS, which is a commercially available off-the-shelf tool designed for various infrastructure assets. By early next year P-AMS will replace National Highway’s 20-year-old HAPMS - Highways England’s Pavement Management System - platform.

TRL noted that by using iROADS means, the company can deliver “a cost-effective, user-friendly platform with fully-customised specifications”.

P-AMS will form part of National Highway’s Asset Management Transformation plan and help to support delivery of the agency’s Digital Roads Strategy designed to establish more efficient ways of working through improved digital integration.

The new system was developed to align with its emerging Asset Management System Strategy (AMSS). AMSS compliance will ensure the new system supports cross-asset data access and analysis, and the company’s new data model.

The pavement is an essential part of the national network, with information stored in P-AMS critical for informing decisions around future requirements. “The customised asset management platform will be rolled out with a detailed transition plan before the current HAPMS system’s end-of-life deadline of March 2023,” said Paul Zanelli, TRL’s strategic ventures director.

“With the new system we will have easier access to asset information,” said Sarah Brookes, National Highways’ lead project manager for P-AMS implementation and who was in charge of HAPMS. “P-AMS will be securely accessible from anywhere from a wide range of devices, which will enable improved analysis and decision-making, ultimately driving quicker and better outcomes.”

iROADS is an open, enterprise digital roads asset management platform which is fully cloud-native and available to customers on subscription basis globally. TRL notes that it allows have a single view of assets by reducing complexity and integrating disparate data silos to gain insights into your assets and guide your decisions.

Using iROADS enables customers to create digital models of road networks to provide previously inaccessible insights to help maintain highways. The recently updated iROADS platform includes a climate change and resilience module and a whole life-cycle module.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Is driver information heading for multi-channel mayhem
    October 22, 2013
    Colin Sowman talks to TRL’s research director Dr Alan Stevens about the future for cash-strapped road authorities’ driver information systems.
  • Ports are facing a digital sea-change
    March 24, 2021
    Next-generation cellular will revolutionise the ports and maritime sector. Its arrival is just in time, as the industry faces a variety of challenges which require new technological solutions
  • Ford, Uber and Lyft to share data through SharedStreets
    October 3, 2018
    Ford, Uber and Lyft will make data sets available on the SharedStreets platform in a bid to help cities and mobility companies manage congestion, cut greenhouse gases and reduce crashes. The commitment was announced at the second annual Bloomberg Global Business Forum in New York. SharedStreets is funded by the Bloomberg Philanthropies consortium. Its aim is to make it easier for the private sector to work with cities around the world and utilise data to improve mobility. According to Ford, the partn
  • Hard shoulder running aids uniform traffic flow and safer driving
    January 23, 2012
    David Crawford detects a market for European experience. Well-established now in at least three European countries, Hard Shoulder Running (HSR) on motorways is exciting growing interest in the US. A November 2010 Report to Congress by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), on the Efficient Use of Highway Capacity, notes the role of HSR in the European-style Active Traffic Management (ATM) strategies now being recommended for implementation in the US where, until recently, they were virtually unknown.