 
     Timothy Compston considers the challenges faced by the operators of the Øresund Bridge between Denmark and Sweden, the largest structure of its kind across Europe.
     
In light of the concerns about the ongoing security threat and the unprecedented flow of migrants, many of the countries that make up the Schengen Area in Europe have re-introduced border controls. For its part, Sweden has rolled out ID checks for train, bus and ferry passengers from Denmark placing the landmark Øresund Bridge very much on the frontline of these changes.
     
By any measure, the Øresund Bridge - which first opened back in 2000 - is an impressive structure carrying four lanes of the E20 (two in each direction) and a rail line between the Danish capital Copenhagen and the city of Malmö in Sweden. The bridge structure spans nearly 8km (5 miles) from the Swedish coast to the artificial island of Peberholm where the roadway enters the 4km (2.5-mile) Drogden Tunnel to the Danish island of Amager and carries 18,000 - 19,000 vehicles each day. 
 
The two governments hold a 50:50 stake in the project and the Øresund Bridge organisation says it is ‘an integrated Danish-Swedish enterprise where Swedes and Danes use both languages.’ There is a single traffic monitoring centre responsible for running the toll station, monitoring traffic and technical systems. It is part of the link’s operations centre (which also includes the bridge’s administration) and is sited just outside Malmo on the Swedish side of Oresund where the toll station is also located.
Border Checks
So what is it like having responsibility for monitoring one of the world’s largest bridge and tunnel combinations and what was the impact of the heightened checks on Sweden-bound travellers? Jopas Wulff, traffic manager with the Øresund Bridge, is the man with the answers and recalls that the implementation of the border controls by the toll booths at the Swedish end was fast-tracked and effectively came in overnight. The police, having routinely checked random vehicles, started checking all vehicles.Rail passengers were checked at Copenhagen airport and Hyllie, the first station in Sweden after the crossing.
Initially, the Danish police were concerned about how the new controls would impact the toll station: “They imagined big issues with congestion all over the bridge and down to the tunnel and that they would have to shut the highway down at the airport.”
However Wulff reckons that this worst-case scenario has not materialised: “We do have some congestion in the rush hours between three and six but the police are manning up so they have the resources down at the toll station.”
He says that, by contrast with the road situation, there are more headaches for those travelling by train, especially for commuters returning from Denmark: “If you are on a train you have to get off at Kastrup station, go through a manual ID check and then board another train to Sweden. It takes more time, there are delays, and the trains don’t go as often as they used to.”
Asked about how  long he believes that the additional  border checks are  likely to remain  in place around the bridge, Wulff  reckons that it is  going to be for  some time to come: “We don’t expect  it [the border  checks] to end this  summer, it is going to be for at  least a year  more. The cooperation  between the police at the border  control and our  control room is now  very good. If they [the police]  have to do  something to make the process  go a bit faster they oblige,”  explains  Wulff.
     
When   individuals  fail the new border checks, Wulff reveals that some are   still  determined - whatever the hazards - to try again and walk on the    highway to reach the tunnel to Sweden: “So far when we have seen this    they have been taken care of by the Danish police and we fire up warning    signs for drivers to prevent an incident.” 
 
He adds that urgent remedial action is in the works so that migrants - or other individuals - don’t have an opportunity to sneak through the railway tunnel whose entrance, he admits, has been a surveillance weak link. The project will see the positioning of new IR and thermal cameras at the tunnel’s entrance to detect people moving in the area.
Beyond   the recent changes at the border, Wulff outlined some of the    long-standing issues the Øresund bridge has faced from a traffic    management perspective and how these have been addressed along the way:    “The key challenge facing us above anything else is to keep the  traffic   running as this [the Øresund Bridge] is the major connection  between   Sweden and Denmark. About 83% of all road traffic goes by this  link,”   says Wulff. 
 
If there is an interruption in the traffic flow due to an accident or a lane closure, the reality is that there are no easy options for drivers besides taking a 60km detour north to board a ferry: “Even then the ferry doesn’t have the capacity to take all the vehicles we carry. So it is very, very, important for us to have fluid, smooth-flowing, traffic running across the bridge at all times.”
Given   just how vital the Øresund Bridge has become as  an  indispensable   transport corridor for the wider region, Wulff says   that the onus is   very much on his team to work proactively with   regards to traffic   surveillance and traffic management: “We have nine   operators that manage   one position 24/7. This is a good number and   means that we can manage   training, vacation times, and sickness.” One   striking change to the   control room, technology-wise, to make life   easier for the operators,   reports Wulff, has been the installation of a   number of new modern video   screens from Barco to form a video wall. 
 
Returning    to the type of situations which the control room is set up  to manage   on  a daily basis, Wulff stresses that if there are  indications that a   car  has stopped in the tunnel - or on the bridge -  it is imperative   that  action is taken immediately: “We don’t just  let an incident run   itself.  We make sure that the car, for example,  is taken away as fast   as  possible so we don’t have something that may  distract other   customers  [drivers]. 
     
Otherwise it is very usual that  you might have   what is called  a ‘looking accident’, if we can prevent  this that is a   major step.”  
 
Talking more about the type of response that can be brought to bear should something happen to disrupt traffic flow or impact on safety, Wulff says that it really depends on whether the situation occurs on the bridge or in the tunnel.
If it is on the bridge there are “a few different    options”, and vehicles are generally removed within 45 minutes but in    the confined space of the tunnel, incident response is ramped up,    considerably. “If a car stops in the tunnel, because we don’t have the    escape lanes you would find on a typical highway, then that is    classified as an accident. It is not an accident where we send    ambulances but within five minutes we would send a tow truck and the    police and protection vehicles for the tow truck to work safely.”
     
   
Incident Detection
Even before the most recent border developments, systems were in place to detect unusual activity. A Traficon video-based incident detection system was installed for the opening of the link in 2000 and this has subsequently been upgraded with a newer version of the system. Wulff comments on the changes in the video analytics technology over that intervening period saying: “This makes the systems today much more sensitive and capable of detecting different sorts of obstacles and issues.”In practice the application of the detection system differs markedly between the bridge and tunnel: “On the bridge there are just some spots where we can detect cars that drive the wrong way but in the tunnel we have 100% coverage for these ‘ghost drivers’ as well as fallen objects, pedestrians, slow moving vehicles and stopped vehicles. We also have some redundancy so if one camera doesn’t work the nearest cameras can cover that area.”
The main cause for ‘ghost drivers’ on the Øresund Bridge is because drivers realise too late that they are on their way to Sweden - despite signs forewarning them that they are approaching the last Danish exit: “People miss that exit and when they come down to the tunnel say ‘I’m not supposed to be here’ and put their car in reverse - which is very dangerous for other road users - and get detected by the detection system.”
While  additional    signs have been added, Wulff says the effect has been  limited. Part of    the rationale for this, he says, is that if there  are too many signs    then experience shows people do not read them all:  “It is much better  to   have fewer signs and a clear message,” he  says. 
     
One     demonstration of the ‘quality not quantity approach are the plans to     replace and upgrade Øresund’s dynamic road signs: “At the moment we     don’t get the response we would like. We are planning on removing the     signs we have and using slightly bigger information signs with more     pictures that say what is further ahead to put more responsibility on     drivers.” Wulff says there will be fewer signs but “there will now be     information signs that can tell drivers if a car is stopped about 3km     ahead and to take appropriate measures and things like that.”
     
Driving     ahead, with all of the measures that are already in place, or in the     works, the ITS infrastructure at the Øresund Bridge is well-placed  to    cope with the changing dynamics of traffic in and around the   structure,   whether as a consequence of new border control   arrangements, vehicles   deciding to travel the wrong way, or simply a   car breaking down. 
 
About the Author: Timothy Compston is a journalist who writes on traffic technology and security issues    
 
 
     
         
         
         
        



