Airborne:
Rhode Island Highway Project Incorporates New Survey
Technique
By Bret Hazell
A recent project to
relocate a portion of Interstate 195 in Providence, R.I.
involved a new aerial survey technique that may be best
recognized for what it didn't do: put highway workers'
lives at risk and snarl traffic for weeks.
The unique survey also
saved taxpayers money in traffic-control costs by putting
fewer highway personnel on the ground, and saved commuters
time by not closing lanes on the heavily traveled freeway.
"Our contacts with the
Rhode Island project have told us that they're seeing an
approximate savings of $100,000, not including the
incalculable savings related to keeping all the travel
lanes open," said Richard Davis, president of the
Richard B. Davis Co. Inc. aerial survey firm of Smith
River, Calif.
If conventional
ground-surveying methods had been used on I-195, lane
closures and significant traffic control would have been
required for weeks, with major traffic delays possibly
occurring, Davis said. The aerial survey required no lane
closures and only minimal traffic control on the road's
shoulders, thus greatly reducing traffic-control costs,
dangers and driver frustration.
Working with the Rhode
Island firms of Maguire Group and Bryant Associates -
contractors for design and engineering - Rhode Island's
Department of Transportation is the nation's first highway
office to survey a major freeway using Richard B. Davis
Co.'s technique of Low Altitude Mapping Photogrammetry
(LAMP).
LAMP involves the use of
sophisticated camera equipment mounted in a small
helicopter, which makes low-altitude passes over the
survey area. This allows close-range photographs of
pre-placed ground targets within the desired project site.
Using complex photogrammetric and computer processing
techniques, survey data is extracted from the photographs
with a by-product being the photos themselves, something
ground surveys don't produce.
The benefits: The
helicopter can photograph the survey area quickly,
efficiently and without putting people on the highway - a
vital safety feature on a thoroughfare like Interstate
195, which bears an estimated 160,000 vehicles per day.
"All it takes is one
inattentive or careless driver to imperil the lives of
ground surveyors," said Davis, adding that
"highway work is among the nation's most deadly
occupations."
Survey accuracy is another
major benefit of the LAMP process, according to Davis.
Because the helicopter can legally fly lower and slower
than airplanes, it provides more accurate readings than
those obtainable by fixed-wing aircraft which must remain
at or above 1,000 feet. Using the LAMP method,
measurements on I-195 were obtained to less than 3/100th
of a foot. More precise accuracy can be obtained if
situations require it.
Four other highway jobs in
the Rhode Island and Boston areas are being negotiated as
a result of the early results from the I-195 project,
Davis said.
In addition to keeping cars
moving in Rhode Island, Richard B. Davis Co. has been
called upon to keep airplanes flying at Portland
International Airport in Oregon, where the firm teamed
with Spencer Gross Inc. of Portland in conducting an
aerial survey of the main runway and taxiways. The survey
technique allowed the airport to function without
affecting air traffic, thereby eliminating the possible
disruption of passenger flights.
Richard B. Davis Co. first
developed LAMP to monitor coastal jetties for the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers. Through periodic high-precision
surveying, the Corps can monitor jetties for early signs
of storm-caused damage. Once identified, jetties can be
repaired before damage worsens and repair costs escalate.
It was a jetty survey in
the Bering Sea, in the remote Pribilof Islands of Alaska,
which earned the company the 1994 National Society of
Professional Surveyors' "Most Interesting Surveying
Project of the Year Award" on March 1 at the
society's annual convention in Charlotte, N.C.
For this project, the
helicopter was flown in a cargo plane from Anchorage to
the islands. Utilizing LAMP technology, the helicopter
surveyed the 1,800-foot-long jetty which guards the
fishing community of St. Paul from furious Bering Sea
storms.
Davis believes the market
for LAMP technology is significant, and that as the
technique becomes more accepted and known, more projects
and people will benefit from its advantages.
About the author:
Bret Hazell serves as general manager for
Richard B. Davis Co. Inc. in Smith River, Calif. He can be
reached at 707-487-6277.
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