
ATI Projects Ltd
ATI Projects Ltd
1 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2013 - 2018Partners:University of Birmingham, UOW, Exova, SKANSKA, Peter Brett Associates +116 partnersUniversity of Birmingham,UOW,Exova,SKANSKA,Peter Brett Associates,Yorkshire Water,Globe Performance Solutions,Utsi Electronics (United Kingdom),Energy and Utilities Alliance,SBWWI,Amey Plc,INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS,Bristol Water Plc,MWH (United Kingdom),National Grid PLC,Utsi Electronics Ltd,Primayer Ltd,URS Corporation,Skanska (United Kingdom),RSK Group plc,Macleod Simmonds Ltd,Macleod Simmonds Ltd,UNESP,Globe Performance Solutions,United Utilities Water PLC,Infotec ( United Kingdom),University of Auckland,J Murphy & Sons Limited,Pipeline Industries Guild (United Kingdom),NAS,Corporation of the City of London, ON,Ordnance Survey,ICE,Exova,Network Rail,Cardno TBE,ATI Projects Ltd,URS Corporation,MWH UK Ltd,Hydrosave UK Limited,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Costain (United Kingdom),Robosynthesis Limited,Halcrow Group Limited,PIPEHAWK PLC,Infotec Consulting,IDS Ingegneria Dei Sistemi S.p.A,,Louisiana Tech University,Keller Ltd,Robosynthesis Limited,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Subscan Technology,University of Wollongong,Innovate UK,T2 Utility Engineers Inc,National Underground Assets Group Ltd,UK Water Industry Research,Osys Technology,National Academy of Sciences,São Paulo State University,Morrison Utility Services,National Underground Assets Group,Pipehawk (United Kingdom),LTU,UK Society for Trenchless Technology,United Utilities (United Kingdom),National Grid (United Kingdom),Leica Geosystems Ltd,UK Society for Trenchless Technolody,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),SPX Corporation (United Kingdom),CH2M Hill (United Kingdom),BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Cardno TBE,Jacobs (United Kingdom),Energy and Utilities Alliance,J Murphy & Sons Limited,Society of British Water and Wastewater Industries,Defence Science and Technology Laboratory,Radiodetection Ltd,ASME,UK Water Industry Research Ltd,Network Rail,United Utilities,University of Birmingham,Stratascan Ltd,Watershed Associates,Colorado School of Mines,Institution of Civil Engineers,Morrison Utility Services,Underground Imaging Technologies UIT,Hydrosave UK Limited,Corporation of the City of London, ON,Site Vision Surveys (United Kingdom),RSK Group plc,COSTAIN LTD,CH2M HILL UNITED KINGDOM,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),Underground Imaging Technologies UIT,T2 Utility Engineers Inc,Subscan Technology,Technology Strategy Board (Innovate UK),Peter Brett Associates,Innovate UK,Ingegneria dei Sistemi (Italy),American Society of Civil Engineers,Keller Ltd,Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),Bristol Water Plc,BALFOUR BEATTY PLC,CSM,Pipeline Industries Guild (United Kingdom),ATI Projects Ltd,OSYS Technology Ltd,Site Vision Surveys Ltd,Ferrovial (United Kingdom),Leica Microsystems (United Kingdom),OS,Watershed Associates,Primayer Ltd,Stratophase LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/K021699/1Funder Contribution: 5,782,840 GBPThe surface urban transport infrastructures - our roads, cycle ways, pedestrian areas, tramways and railways - are supported by the ground, and hence the properties of the ground must control to a significant degree their structural performance. The utility services infrastructure - the pipes and cables that deliver utility services to our homes and which supports urban living - is usually buried beneath our urban streets, that is it lies below the surface transport infrastructure (usually roads and paved pedestrian areas). It follows that streetworks to install, replace, repair or maintain these utility service pipes or cables using traditional trench excavations will disrupt traffic and people movement, and will often significantly damage the surface transport infrastructure and the ground on which it bears. It is clear, therefore, that the ground and physical (i.e. utility service and surface transport) infrastructures exist according to a symbiotic relationship: intervene physically in one, and the others are almost inevitably affected in some way, either immediately or in the future. Moreover the physical condition of the pipes and cables, of the ground and of the overlying road structure, is consequently of crucial importance in determining the nature and severity of the impacts that streetworks cause. Assessing the Underworld (ATU) aims to use geophysical sensors deployed both on the surface and inside water pipes to determine remotely (that is, without excavation) the condition of these urban assets. ATU builds on the highly successful Mapping the Underworld (MTU) project funded by EPSRC's first IDEAS Factory (or sandpit) and supported by many industry partners. The MTU sandpit brought together a team that has grown to be acknowledged as international leaders in this field. ATU introduces leaders in climate change, infrastructure policy, engineering sustainability and pipeline systems to the MTU team to take the research into a new sphere of influence as part of a 25-year vision to make streetworks more sustainable. ATU proposes to develop the geophysical sensors created in MTU to look for different targets: indications that the buried pipes and cables are showing signs of degradation or failure, indications that the road structure is showing signs of degradation (e.g. cracking, delamination or wetting) and indications that the ground has properties different to unaltered ground (e.g. wetted or eroded by leaking pipes, loosened by local trench excavations, wetted by water ingress through cracked road structures). For example, a deteriorated (fractured, laterally displaced, corroded or holed) pipe will give a different response to the geophysical sensors than a pristine pipe, while wetting of the adjacent soil or voids created by local erosion due to leakage from a water-bearing pipe will result in a different ground response to unaltered natural soil or fill. Similarly a deteriorated road (with vertical cracks, or with a wetted foundation) will give a different response to intact, coherent bound layers sitting on a properly drained foundation. Taking the information provided by the geophysical sensors and combining it with records for the pipes, cables and roads, and introducing deterioration models for these physical infrastructures knowing their age and recorded condition (where this information is available), will allow a means of predicting how they will react if a trench is dug in a particular road. In some cases alternative construction techniques could avert serious damage (e.g. water pipe bursts, road structural failure requiring complete reconstruction) or injury (gas pipe busts). Making this information available will be achieved by creating a Decision Support System for streetworks engineers. Finally, the full impacts to the economy, society and environment of streetworks will be modelled in a sustainability assessment framework so that the wider impacts of the works are made clear.
All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::06454ed8b616324db34598c0521354e0&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>
For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eumore_vert All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::06454ed8b616324db34598c0521354e0&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>
For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu