It’s not a lot of fun working on road maintenance or road construction worksites. By definition, you’re out in all weathers. You’re not popular with motorists, who blame you for hold-ups. It’s frequently physically arduous. And, worst of all, the sector has an unenviable record of injuries - even fatalities.
     
Often working just a metre or so from fast-moving traffic, maintenance and construction crews frequently have only the protection of warning trailers and plastic bollards to protect them from potentially lethal accidents. Much depends on private motorists or heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers being alert – especially on motorways, where the monotony of a journey can slow reactions. 
     
To help ease this problem, German company Gewi is deploying a new system that integrates and disseminates advance warning of road workzones to approaching drivers through in-car systems.
     
 
     
The state has experienced two deaths among road maintenance personnel - in 2014 and 2017 - together with a large number of incidents. In recent years, for example, there have been seven to 10 instances per year of trucks colliding with warning trailers protecting workzones. 
     
The priority for Saxony-Anhalt, said Ronny Dittrich, who is responsible for product management of Gewi’s workzone project, was to get information regarding the location of workzones in front of motorists – particularly truck drivers – to alert them as they approached road personnel. 
     
“The idea was to use existing services that were in place, to combine systems and transmit information about those sites,” he said.
     
To do this, Gewi developed its own commercial, off-the-shelf software product. While not a workzone planning tool as such, TIC for Workzones can now be used from the earliest stages of developing a zone through to its completion and enables its precise position to be plotted on to digital systems.
     
Workzones can involve one or more highways agencies, together with the main contractor and a multiplicity of subcontractors. This raises issues about the uninterrupted flow of information.
     
“One problem that occurs worldwide is that information about workzones is typically managed very poorly, especially across various agencies,” noted Danny Woolard, business development director for Gewi for Europe and Australia. 
     
TIC is designed to manage that communication process, from the early planning stages when a workzone is defined, initially managing the data to produce the necessary permits. This information can then be disseminated through multiple organisations. 
     
Information on the precise location of a workzone, especially when it   changes over the course of a lengthy project, is also gathered and   disseminated to the public and across the internet – and specifically,   in a format that can be understood and displayed by car navigation   systems.
      
At  last year’s  ITS America exhibition, Gewi organised a demonstration  with a US company  that produces roadside beacons that can be attached  to workzone  bollards whose position can be accurately tracked. “This is  becoming  more and more relevant as we move towards automated driving,”  noted  Woolard.
 
     
Back  in Germany, meanwhile, the Gewi system uses TIC to gather the necessary  workzone information and pass it to the police, who in turn pass it to  the nationwide public radio network, which broadcasts the information to  in-car radios. 
     
“The  police use TIC already,” said Dittrich. “We just extended that to a more  detailed level at the workzones. Everything interacts fluently. That  allows the information [regarding workzone locations] to be sent to  navigation and information systems in drivers’ cars within around two  minutes.”
     
By mid-March  every workzone warning trailer in Saxony-Anhalt was due to be equipped  with the necessary equipment to allow its position to be sent over the  system. 
     
Additionally, the  system is planned to be extended to two other federal German states,  North Rhine-Westphalia and Hesse, both of which have high population  densities and which already operate the TIC system.
     
 
Different approach
     
On the other side of the Atlantic, meanwhile, a different approach to workzone safety is about to be trialled.
     
The  Center for Technology Implementation (CTI) at 
     
VTTI  is focused on helping agencies such as Virginia Department of  Transportation to implement new technologies and has been looking at  whether information could also go in the opposite direction – with roads  personnel receiving information (perhaps through a cloud-based system)  on vehicles as they near them.
     
CTI  director Michael Mollenhauer noted that, in past projects, normal GPS  processing had not been sufficiently accurate to reliably localise an  individual’s position. And, as humans move in random ways, predicting  their movements has always been difficult.  
     
However,  using real-time kinematic (RTK) correction gives a more precise GPS  position – down to one metre or less. The idea would be to incorporate  that improved GPS system into a vest that would then communicate its  position to a connected vehicle. Potentially, it could also calculate  the trajectories of people and cars. 
     
VTTI  has been looking at the possibility of collecting and interpreting the  movements of workers when undertaking specific jobs, such as patching  concrete or repairing barriers so that their likely behaviour could be  understood and incorporated into the system.
     
“We’re  trying to build the sensors into the vest so it’s not a burden to the  wearer and is part of their standard PPE [personal protective  equipment],” said Mollenhauer. 
     
There  have been three phases to the project, using different communication  modes. The first was dedicated short-range communications; the second,  ultra-wideband technology. “As technology developers, we try to be  agnostic,” said Mollenhauer.
     
However, both methods had shortcomings. 
     
 
Warning modes
     
A  third approach is now under way using RTK GPS, with trials of the  latest version of the vests scheduled to be held this summer. Built-in  equipment will include lightweight, rechargeable and replaceable  batteries, a vibrating haptic sensor plus LED flashing lights and  speakers to provide audible warnings. 
     
“Workzones  are typically quite noisy and there are some visibility issues such as  darkness and blowing dust, so dual modes are valuable,” Mollenhauer  noted.
     
There is also an  option of incorporating an inertial sensor that will give information on  how workzone personnel are orientating themselves. 
     
However,  he is conscious of the possibility that some warning modes could  startle staff at safety-critical moments, so he and his team are  experimenting with methods of alerting personnel that could impart the  necessary information without causing distraction.
     
If  testing goes well, VTTI is planning to put together a package of  intellectual property that can then be licensed to a manufacturer to  produce the vests: “We believe we will have it ready for production  around December 2019.” 
     
One  potential problem is the number of ‘dumb’ vehicles on the roads, older  models that lack navigation systems or even radios capable of picking up  automatic traffic broadcasts. However, the latter system has been  incorporated into car radio systems since the mid-1990s, so it is a  reducing factor.
     
 Workzone crashes in US: rising numbers
         
Large trucks are responsible for a large, and growing, proportion of US workzone accidents in which people are killed, according to statistics from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.
         
Figures released in January this year noted that the percentage of fatal workzone crashes involving at least one large truck increased to 30.4% in 2017. This was an increase over the previous two years – 27.2% for 2016 and 26.8% in 2015.    
 
    
        
        
        
        



