Queensland lays groundwork for growth with an eye on infrastructure delivery

Read how roads and infrastructure will play a key role in the future.  The Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR) says it continues to face significant challenges in harnessing opportunities and mitigating associated risks, like increased congestion.
Read how roads and infrastructure will play a key role in the future.  The Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR) says it continues to face significant challenges in harnessing opportunities and mitigating associated risks, like increased congestion.
Read how roads and infrastructure will play a key role in the future.  The Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR) says it continues to face significant challenges in harnessing opportunities and mitigating associated risks, like increased congestion.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ latest data, of all the states, Queensland gained the biggest boost from net interstate migration over the March 2021 quarter. 

What was once a story for retirement, Australia’s Sunshine State has turned a page on jobs and population growth. The latest chapter cites a ‘millennial migration’ and this is largely centred on the problems in housing affordability, congestion and infrastructure bottlenecks happening across Sydney and Melbourne. 

With younger people realising they can have the lifestyle they desire up north, COVID-19 in the rear-view, and the 2032 Brisbane Summer Olympics locked in, Queensland is in the box seat to seize the opportunity in the decade ahead. 

Roads and infrastructure will play a key role in this future with the Government recently announcing a four-year, $52.2 billion infrastructure spend.

Brisbane at sunset

 

While the state has made substantial investments in infrastructure and public transport over the past decade, the Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR) says it’s continuing to face significant challenges in harnessing opportunities and mitigating associated risks, like increased congestion.

"Connecting the regions and creating more liveable communities is the aim of the game, but the journey in getting there is just as important’ Gabriels says.

As Queensland builds back better, how we go about this – and how we improve motorist experience and construction worker safety – will be just as key as the infrastructure that is developed. 

We’re talking about traffic monitoring...

All major highway projects in Queensland have some level of traffic monitoring requirement involved. Contractors are expected to carry out 30 days of baseline travel time monitoring pre-construction, as well as during construction and sometimes one-to-two months after completion.

The purpose is to gather information that continuously informs decision-making to ensure disruption is kept to a minimum while conforming to compliance standards. 

By capturing journey time information, contractors can be held accountable for the impact their work is having. There is a silver lining too as this information can be used to adjust their work to ensure that they are having minimal impact on the road users and local community whilst keeping their clients informed.

The outcome is delivering infrastructure that considers better community experience, road user and worker safety, and faster completion times.  

For example, if you’re managing a high-risk situation – projects near shopping centres or high-profile intersections – or experiencing excessive delays around a site, monitoring queues (where and when they occur, how long the queue is, and the impact on motorists) can help mitigate issues before they spiral out of control. 

Monitoring provides contractors and government agencies the granular visibility they need to understand when traffic is backing up beyond acceptable levels, determine what’s causing the issue and trigger specific actions. With the right context, it’s easier to deliver better outcomes for the community. 

Travel time and queue monitoring is almost always required, but the reality we face is it is often softly enforced or delivered to the minimum requirements. 

"Why? The difficulty, time and cost. As soon as a project is awarded, there is immediate pressure for work to begin both as a visible sign of progress to the public and for the project to be commercially viable for the contractor" Gabriels says.

This pressure has failed to serve traditional ways of collecting travel time and queue monitoring information. Historically, methods have involved the installation of expensive roadside hardware or the use of human observation, which not only takes time to procure and set up but requires dedicated effort to interpret into a usable form.  

The challenge is compounded because this traditional way of collecting information often puts people in harm’s way – asking a construction worker to monitor a section of road for upwards of two hours and not divert their attention is not only difficult but dangerous.

Due to these complexities, this work has often been de-prioritised (or not seen as critical) in the interest of getting started. But the knock-on effect of this initial decision-making can lead to loss of productivity, efficiency and opportunities throughout the rest of the build.  

An impetus for change

With more and more roads being built across the state, and the need to better protect stakeholder safety and experience, the Government is raising the bar on its traffic control mandates. Smart technology will be at the epicentre. 

In the last few months, Queensland has experienced two fatal incidents at road sites – one of which was an end-of-queue collision involving an ambulance and truck – applying further pressure for change. 

With digital technology at our fingertips, there is a better way now that leverages modern datasets, creating the ability to understand journey times, customer experience and queuing in rich granularity without the need for workers on-foot.

We also don’t need to be limited to passive collection and monthly reporting. The benefits of collecting a rich understanding of road performance extend to communications, with the ability to use this information to provide accurate, live travel advice directly to motorists, helping to both minimise congestion and manage expectations. Nudging even 10 per cent of motorists down a faster alternative road can significantly speed up delivery. 

Ultimately, this reduces frustration, complaints, congestion, and potential accidents, overall improving road user experience.  

"Getting stuck in traffic queues is one of the more frustrating aspects of driving in any urban or rural area and staying at the forefront of motorist expectations requires a smarter, more connected approach" Micah Gabriels says.

It’s not an easy task to build an aeroplane while flying it but this is the task at hand. Queensland is pushing the status quo in many ways others aren’t. It’s putting new technologies and innovation at the heart of safety and user experience so we get the state of the future, sooner. 

This article was originally published in the print edition of the Courier Mail

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