Home Leica Geosystems
  Solutions
Products
Support - Service
About us
Contact  
 
Solutions  
 
Aerospace
 
 
Agriculture
 
 
Asset & Facilities Mgmt
 
 
Automotive
 
 
Building & Construction
 
 
Cadastral
 
 
Disaster & Emergency Management
 
 
Engineering
 
 
 Airports and Stadiums
 
 
 Bridges
 
 
 Harbours and Docks
 
 
 Large Building Construction
 
 
 Plants & Refineries
 
 
 Railways
 
 
  Precision Concrete for 300 kmh Trains
 
 
  One Hundred and One Hours
 
 
  Olympic High Speed
 
 
  57 km long and in the right Place
 
 
  Documenting a Subsea Tunnel
 
 
  City-Tunnel Leipzig
 
 
  Automated 3D control for ballasting works
 
 
  High precision railway ballast construction
 
 
  Australian rail survey
 
 
  West Coast Main Line
 
 
  High Speed Railway
 
 
  Vancouver SkyTrain
 
 
  Vereina Tunnel - Switzerland
 
 
  Moving a railway bridge
 
 
  Tunnel profiles in subways
 
 
  Railway rapid transport
 
 
 Roads
 
 
 Sites
 
 
 Tunnel surveys
 
 
 Water Supplies
 
 
Forensics & Public Safety
 
 
General Industry
 
 
Mining & Exploration
 
 
Monitoring
 
 
Other
 

HDS in Highway Widening

HDS Provides Accuracy in Highway Widening Project
Dave Stewart is the author of the article, "A picture is worth 45 million data points," published in the July 2005 edition of CE News.
Article Excerpt:

"Laser scanning produces highly accurate digital terrain models and as-built drawings of a busy Dallas highway without closing lanes or endangering surveyors.

Often described as 'the main street of the Metroplex,' the 22-mile-long Dallas North Tollway (DNT) is the primary corridor between the downtown Dallas business districts and growing cities north of Dallas. This stretch of six-lane highway supports as many as 140,000 vehicles and more than 450,000 toll transactions each day. So when the North Texas Tollway Authority (NTTA) was ready to embark on a tollway widening project, they looked to do so while maintaining safety for motorists, as well as for engineers, planners, and land surveyors who would need to collect the necessary data.

Time estimates for the project indicated that gathering the data using conventional survey techniques would take at least a month, given the required accuracy."

To read more of "A picture is worth 45 million data points," visit the July 2005 issue of CE News on-line:


A picture is worth 45 million data points (Link)  
 
 
  Additional Information
 
  Web Inquiry
Please send me more information.