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

  • Canadian authorities convinced of enforcement safety benefits
    November 28, 2012
    Cost-benefit analysis invariably finds highly in favour of speed and red light enforcement, particularly so in Edmonton in the Alberta province of Canada, where authorities need no convincing of the merits of road safety engineering. Justification of enforcement efforts on economic grounds has been reinforced this year, by a study of the costs and benefits of red light enforcement. New York-based economic research firm John Dunham & Associates carried out this latest analysis for American Traffic Solutions
  • Benefits of investment in ITS technologies
    October 19, 2012
    What price can be put on the value of a life? How much should be spent on preventing untimely deaths? Difficult questions such as these help to put the comparatively small costs of ITS systems into context. While monetary analysis may seem cold and inhumane in consideration of road casualties, death and costly clear-up are often the stark reality transportation authorities are dealing with. This issue of ITS International contains numerous examples of large benefits to be gained from relatively modest inves
  • Adaptive Signal Control – More Than Meets the Eye
    March 9, 2016
    Planned roadway improvements prompted the use of Adaptive Signal Control around Madison – a move that has proved successful as Scott Langer explains. Madison, Wisconsin’s state capital and second largest city (after Milwaukee), is the county seat of Dane County and home of the University of Wisconsin. With affordable housing, nationally ranked schools, one of the best healthcare systems, low unemployment and thriving cultural and community events, last year Madison topped Money magazine’s ‘Best Places to Li
  • First ScotRail unveils smartcard plan
    January 9, 2013
    In the UK, rail operator First ScotRail plans to install 140 smartcard validation machines across seventy of the 350 stations in Scotland, focusing on the Aberdeen, Stirling and Strathclyde areas. The technology was installed in twenty-seven stations at the end of 2012, and should be implemented in the remaining stations in the next three months. Building on a pilot scheme for annual season-ticket holders that has been running between Edinburgh and Glasgow on the line through Falkirk since 2011, the move wi