Skip to main content

Esri and AgileAssets offer one-stop asset management

The big news on the stand of geographic information system (GIS) software specialist Esri is its strategic collaboration with infrastructure asset management software AgileAssets on technology development and an implementation services. Not only will this will allow authorities to benefit from the combination of AgileAssets’ asset management solutions and Esri’s ArcGIS, further integration will see Estri’s ArcGIS Server, Roads & Highways, Collector and Survey for ArcGIS 123 available on AgileAssets’ platfo
April 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

The big news on the stand of geographic information system (GIS) software specialist 50 Esri is its strategic collaboration with infrastructure asset management software AgileAssets on technology development and an implementation services.

Not only will this will allow authorities to benefit from the combination of AgileAssets’ asset management solutions and Esri’s ArcGIS, further integration will see Estri’s ArcGIS Server, Roads & Highways, Collector and Survey for ArcGIS 123 available on AgileAssets’ platform.

In addition, AgileAssets has established a new consultation and deployment practice that offers transportation authorities a ‘one-stop shop’ for implementing integrated AgileAssets-Esri solutions.

According to AgileAssets’ CEO Stuart Hudson, the move is a turning point for the industry and offers benefits for those responsible for the maintenance and operations of high-value infrastructure assets. Terry Bills, transportation industry manager at Esri, said the collaboration provides users with a combination of advanced geospatial analytics and elegant mapping that outlines where, when and how to optimally invest their budgets.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Onssi and Vaxtor partner on license plate recognition integration
    February 12, 2018
    Vaxtor Corporation’s (Vaxtor) advanced LPR analytics platform can now be deployed across Onssi’s Ocularis VMS platform to recognize, capture and archive data on license plates, railway vehicles, U.S. Department of Transport (USDOT) numbers and more as part of an integration partnership between both companies. The agreement, according to Onssi’s Ken LaMarcam VP of sales & marketing, allows the solution to deliver a range of security and operations data to meet the specific challenges of the transportation
  • Automotive players targeting corporate mobility
    April 14, 2015
    Offering services that facilitate an integrated door-to-door business travel management solution is one of the main focus areas for growth and investment in 2015 in the automotive industry, according to Frost & Sullivan. With the business travel market worth US$1.3 trillion (GBTA), there is an increasing trend towards companies using online booking tools and cloud based services to plan, book, and expense/account business trips. Automotive market players are working to have their share of the future corpora
  • Teleste to enable development of smart campus applications in Thailand
    March 6, 2019
    Teleste is to help the Prince of Songkla University (PSU) in Thailand develop smart campus applications for transport and street lighting. PSU students and researchers will utilise Teleste’s advanced video management, Internet of Things and situational technologies to develop new services and applications. The project is being launched in support of the government’s Digital Thailand 4.0, an initiative which seeks to establish an economy based on digital computing technologies. Dr. Wasin Suwannarat, vi
  • Vehicle ownership - a thing of the past?
    May 22, 2012
    Convergence of electron-powered vehicles with connected vehicle technologies could mean that only a few decades from now the idea of owning a vehicle will be entirely alien to the road user. By Technolution chief scientist Dave Marples with Jason Barnes Even when taken individually, many of the developments going on and around vehiclebased mobility will bring about major changes in transportation. Taken collectively, the transformations we might expect are nothing short of profound. Enumeration of the influ