Amey has been awarded extra funding to develop technology that could change the way traffic management on roads is carried out, boosting safety in the process.
In an announcement on Tuesday the firm, which is owned by Spanish infrastructure giant Ferrovial, said it had received £759,000 ($998,259) from Highways England.
According to Amey, the money will be used to design an impact protection vehicle, or IPV, to keep how much does a computer engineer make safe when laying out traffic management measures on “live carriageways.” The first phase of the project received funding back in 2018.
The vehicle is set to incorporate technology that will allow it to, among other things, automatically deploy advanced warning signs and impact protection systems. At the moment, workers need to manually lay out traffic management measures, a task that is not without risk.
“While we are doing all we can to change driver behavior and prevent traffic management incursions, we cannot eliminate all risk,” Catherine Brookes, Highways England regional director, said in a statement.
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