Skip to main content

SPONSORED WEBINAR: AI in road maintenance and asset management

Vaisala webinar on 10 June looks at benefits of RoadAI solution
May 26, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Vaisala's RoadAI can help improve operational efficiency and highway safety (© Vyaskn | Dreamstime.com)

Many road maintenance organisations are looking for more efficient and cost-effective ways to maintain their networks.

Artificial intelligence (AI), and specifically Vaisala's RoadAI, can help manage network condition assessments and safety inspections, as well as optimise network maintenance and budgets. 

Vaisala has developed RoadAI in collaboration with industry experts and engineers to ensure the solution addresses the specific requirements of road maintenance organisations and enables improvements in infrastructure management, operational efficiency and roadway safety.

Please join us for a 30-minute webinar on 10 June and learn:

•    How AI fits into the larger picture of road maintenance
•    How current RoadAI customers are deploying the technology with their existing teams
•    How to get high-quality data and faster response times - all at significant budget savings
•    How Roadvideo and video analytics enhances road maintenance capabilities

In the webinar, Markus Melander, Vaisala head of business development, computer vision R&D, will discuss AI, computer vision and RoadAI.

Ben Brown, business development manager, will talk about Vaisala's RoadAI implementation and use cases. 

Who should attend
Road maintenance decision-makers, inspectors, consultants, engineers and anyone else interested in improving their network management and pavement programming. 

Participants will be able to direct questions to the presenters. 

RoadAI has the technology you need to: 

•    Reliably & objectively analyse your road conditions
•    Upload automated assessments and inspector notes
•    Make maintenance decisions and respond faster
•    Keep your roads safer

Register for the webinar here.  

If you can’t make the live time, register anyway and we’ll send you a link to the recording.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Professional training key to the future of ITS
    May 21, 2012
    A substantial portfolio of resources is available and expanding, to help employers and professionals build essential skills for current and future needs – the ITS Professional Capacity Building Program. Pete Goldin reports. The US Department of Transportation (USDOT) views ITS as key to the future of transportation, as is evident from the department’s ITS Professional Capacity Building (PCB) program. This is a further manifestation of USDOT’s commitment to ITS. The PCB program provides anyone in the transpo
  • Webinar: developments in driver assistance systems
    February 2, 2015
    The webinar on 6 February from 1400-1500 CET, From Advanced Active Safety Systems to Automated Systems: From interactIVe to AdaptIVe and beyond focuses on the evolution from driver assistance systems to automated driving. This is based mainly on two large scale EU integrated projects: interactIVe and AdaptIVe. The webinar will discuss the interactIVe project, its objectives, main outcomes and lessons learned and provide an overview of the objectives and vision of automated driving functions that will be
  • Road safety award for Idaho Transportation Department and Vaisala
    December 3, 2013
    Vaisala's collaboration with the Idaho Transportation Department has been recognised by the US Road Safety Foundation and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) as winners of the biennial National Roadway Safety Awards. The award winners were chosen for reducing fatalities and injuries on roadways through excellence and innovation in operations, planning, and design. The Idaho Transportation Department, using Vaisala's pavement sensors that calculate grip or friction values, found that this value can als
  • ITS needs to talk the talk as well as walk the walk
    March 24, 2014
    The US automated enforcement market is in rude health as the number of systems and applications continues to grow and broaden. Jason Barnes reports. Blessed and cursed – arguably, in equal measure – with a constitution which stresses the right to self-expression and determination, the US has had a harder journey than most to the more widespread use of automated traffic enforcement systems. In some cases, opposition to the concept has been extreme – including the murder of a roadside civil enforcement offici