Skip to main content

Awards for innovative of intelligent road studs installations

An intelligent road stud solution deployed on the A720 Sheriffhall Roundabout, Edinburgh, Scotland, has won two separate industry awards, the CIHT John Smart Road Safety Award at the Chartered Institution of Highways & Transportation annual awards and an award at the 14th annual Scottish Transport Awards. Clearview Intelligence, working alongside BEAR Scotland and current incumbents Amey, for Transport Scotland, installed the studs on the six-arm roundabout, which connects several important routes, incl
June 22, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
An intelligent road stud solution deployed on the A720 Sheriffhall Roundabout, Edinburgh, Scotland, has won two separate industry awards,  the CIHT John Smart Road Safety Award at the Chartered Institution of Highways & Transportation annual awards and an award at the 14th annual Scottish Transport Awards.

Clearview Intelligence, working alongside BEAR Scotland and current incumbents 6110 Amey, for 505 Transport Scotland, installed the studs on the six-arm roundabout, which connects several important routes, including the A7 and the A720, and handles upwards of 42,000 vehicles a day.

The roundabout is traffic signal controlled and features spiral markings to guide drivers through the junction to their destination arm. Despite these measures, casualty statistics indicated that Sheriffhall had a high frequency of accidents with some 65 injuries recorded in the 10 years to 2013. Additionally, even minor collisions at this junction have the knock-on effect of causing significant disruption across the network.

Entry to the roundabout from the A720 is traffic light controlled, so the new scheme co-ordinates this signalisation with the installation of the intelligent hardwired road studs to increase driver awareness and improve lane discipline across the A720 routes over the roundabout.

When the traffic signal turns green, the road studs immediately illuminate and guide drivers onto the appropriate lanes of the roundabout. The studs are extinguished when the signal turns red and traffic from other arms may enter the roundabout.

According to independent research by the Transport Research Institute at Edinburgh Napier University in 2015, the studs have a positive impact even during daylight hours; lane transgression rate decreases as traffic flow increases; and driver behaviour was found to be more predictable and consistent post-installation. The scheme has also resulted in a reduction in lane transgression activity across nearly all vehicle types and manoeuvres, while there has been a significant reduction in transgression rate (>50%) for medium-sized vehicles.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens to implement motorway junction improvements
    February 13, 2015
    Siemens is to supply and install traffic signals and controllers for two major junction improvements schemes on the M27 motorway in Hampshire, UK. The contracts, which are funded by the UK government’s US$488 million pinch point scheme, have been awarded by civil contractors Interserve Construction and Jackson Civil Engineering and are intended to help alleviate the flow of traffic joining and leaving the busy M27 junctions 3 and 5. The upgrade work, which is already underway, will see additional lane
  • ITS awards for highways technology company
    October 31, 2014
    Two projects which highways technology company Rennicks says could set the blueprint for a fresh approach to road safety have sparked a double celebration for the company. It has landed the title of Road Marking Project of the Year at the recent Highways Magazine Excellence Awards for a ground-breaking scheme in Scotland using solar-powered active road stud technology. And the company also clinched an ITS Ireland ITS Excellence award after providing the largest solar-powered variable message signs for t
  • Making cars safer for vulnerable road users
    June 2, 2016
    Richard Cuerden considers measures to improve the safety of vulnerable road users. The competitive nature of the car market has seen an increase in protection for those travelling inside the vehicle and this is reflected in the casualty statistics -but the same does not apply to those outside the vehicle. And with current societal trends such as ageing populations, an increasing number of pedestrians and cyclists encouraged by environmental policies, this is an area that authorities such as the European Uni
  • A9 Safety Group wins prestigious road safety award
    June 12, 2015
    The A9 Safety Group in the UK has won the CIHT John Smart Road Safety Award, for a range of interventions along more than 200km of carriageway, including the implementation of 50 SPECS3 average speed cameras, supplied by Vysionics. The A9 SPECS3 installation has been in operation since October 2014, and is already delivering impressive changes to driver behaviour. Whilst it is still too early to report on casualty analysis, key performance indicators are already demonstrating that drivers have improved the