XXIII International FIG Congress : Shaping the Change

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Research Title: 
The Location and Positioning of Buried Pipes and Cables in Built Up Areas
Authors: 
Ahmad Taha
Authors: 
Gethin Wyn Roberts
Authors: 
Xiaolin Meng
Authors: 
Jean-Philippe Montllet
Country: 
Germany
Date: 
Sun, 2006-10-08
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The Location and Positioning of Buried Pipes and Cables in Built Up Areas 125.59 KB
Research Abstract: 

There are currently more than four million kilometres of underground cables and pipes in the UK alone a combination of water, sewer, gas, electricity and drainage. It is estimated that there are 1.5 million holes dug every year on UK highways and footpaths by utility companies so they can install new services and maintain existing ones. In the UK, many of todayys buried water and sewerage assetss were laid during Victorian times (up to 200 years ago) when accurate records of the location and depth of each pipe were not kept. Every time a company digs a hole it runs the risk of hitting one of these pipes, causing disruption to drivers and customers, or a live power cable, which in some cases can prove fatal for workers. Further to this, up until recently, the recording of the utilitiess location was not carried out in an accurate or methodical manner. Locating these underground assets is currently hit and miss ground probing radar is widely used with some success but is slow and not reliable to the depths required, particularly in the UKKs clay soils, and cannot locate newer plastic pipes. Researchers in The University of Nottinghamms Institute of Engineering Surveying and Space Geodesy are part of a 1 million, multi-partner four-year research programme called Mapping the Underworld, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council aimed at developing new solutions to solve these problems.