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14 Projects, page 1 of 3
assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2022Partners:University of Bristol, Washington University in St. Louis, University of Wollongong, University of Bristol, Loughborough University +9 partnersUniversity of Bristol,Washington University in St. Louis,University of Wollongong,University of Bristol,Loughborough University,Arup Group Ltd,Resilience Direct,Department for Transport,Loughborough University,UOW,Arup Group,DfT,Resilience Direct,University of WashingtonFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/R00742X/2Funder Contribution: 226,452 GBPDisruption to the transport network that connects the UK's urban areas - enabling the flows of good and services between them - has significant implications for people's safety and the economy. Recent extreme weather events have exposed the vulnerability of this network to flood damage and challenged emergency services during floods, leading to direct economic impacts, long-term disruption to communities, and cascading disruption to other infrastructure services that rely on the integrity of the transport network. Many of the strategic links have been built without any particular flooding protection criteria, and their frequency of use has outstripped their design specification. A particular problem, and focus of this research, is the vulnerability of bridges. In 2009 the Cumbria region suffered £3m in repair and replacement costs due to the collapse or severe damage of 29 bridges, however the economic and societal costs were significantly larger (e.g. the increased travel time was estimated to cost businesses as much as £2m per week). Understanding the risks associated with the failure or limited serviceability of bridges is a key priority identified in the National Flood Resilience Review and in the Climate Change Risk Assessment. Whilst monitoring and structural analysis can help identify bridges that are susceptible to failure, it is also necessary to understand the implications of their failure on the wider transport network to enable risk-based decision-making and prioritisation of limited funds for maintenance and enhancing national resilience. This fellowship proposal will address this crucial priority, through the development of a novel national, and more detailed regional, assessment model for bridge failures from high river flows. By working with key stakeholders the regional and national model will be co-designed to enable it to be used independently by these organisations to support their decision-making. The work contributes to the LWEC vision by addressing two themes: (1) UK cities system as a system of interconnected cities: (2) environmental risk to networks and understanding of the potential and implications of failure at national level. Moreover, it supports the EPSRC 'Resilient Nation' Prosperity Outcome by delve into robust functioning of complex infrastructures. The fellowship will also provide the springboard to accelerate my academic career and develop an independent research direction. The work will be conducted at Newcastle University, where there is a diverse portfolio of RCUK funded pioneering research on infrastructure and flooding, providing the ideal research environment for this fellowship. Secondments to leading international research institutions will provide a broader perspective and build my network of collaborators.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2017Partners:UOWUOWFunder: Swiss National Science Foundation Project Code: 172001Funder Contribution: 46,458more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2018Partners:Washington University in St. Louis, Ove Arup & Partners Ltd, DfT, Arup Group Ltd, Newcastle University +11 partnersWashington University in St. Louis,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,DfT,Arup Group Ltd,Newcastle University,University of Washington,Loughborough University,Resilience Direct,Department for Transport,Loughborough University,UOW,Arup Group,University of Wollongong,Newcastle University,Resilience Direct,University of WashingtonFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/R00742X/1Funder Contribution: 272,638 GBPDisruption to the transport network that connects the UK's urban areas - enabling the flows of good and services between them - has significant implications for people's safety and the economy. Recent extreme weather events have exposed the vulnerability of this network to flood damage and challenged emergency services during floods, leading to direct economic impacts, long-term disruption to communities, and cascading disruption to other infrastructure services that rely on the integrity of the transport network. Many of the strategic links have been built without any particular flooding protection criteria, and their frequency of use has outstripped their design specification. A particular problem, and focus of this research, is the vulnerability of bridges. In 2009 the Cumbria region suffered £3m in repair and replacement costs due to the collapse or severe damage of 29 bridges, however the economic and societal costs were significantly larger (e.g. the increased travel time was estimated to cost businesses as much as £2m per week). Understanding the risks associated with the failure or limited serviceability of bridges is a key priority identified in the National Flood Resilience Review and in the Climate Change Risk Assessment. Whilst monitoring and structural analysis can help identify bridges that are susceptible to failure, it is also necessary to understand the implications of their failure on the wider transport network to enable risk-based decision-making and prioritisation of limited funds for maintenance and enhancing national resilience. This fellowship proposal will address this crucial priority, through the development of a novel national, and more detailed regional, assessment model for bridge failures from high river flows. By working with key stakeholders the regional and national model will be co-designed to enable it to be used independently by these organisations to support their decision-making. The work contributes to the LWEC vision by addressing two themes: (1) UK cities system as a system of interconnected cities: (2) environmental risk to networks and understanding of the potential and implications of failure at national level. Moreover, it supports the EPSRC 'Resilient Nation' Prosperity Outcome by delve into robust functioning of complex infrastructures. The fellowship will also provide the springboard to accelerate my academic career and develop an independent research direction. The work will be conducted at Newcastle University, where there is a diverse portfolio of RCUK funded pioneering research on infrastructure and flooding, providing the ideal research environment for this fellowship. Secondments to leading international research institutions will provide a broader perspective and build my network of collaborators.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2013 - 2018Partners:Energy and Utilities Alliance, Amey Plc, Subscan Technology, Bristol Water Plc, Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL +118 partnersEnergy and Utilities Alliance,Amey Plc,Subscan Technology,Bristol Water Plc,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Macleod Simmonds Ltd,Yorkshire Water Services Ltd,UNESP,University of Auckland,Cardno TBE,Energy and Utilities Alliance,SBWWI,ASME,Hydrosave UK Limited,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),Leica Microsystems (United Kingdom),Stratascan Ltd,University of Wollongong,CSM,United Utilities (United Kingdom),Network Rail,Watershed Associates,Sao Paulo State University UNESP,J Murphy & Sons Limited,Infotec Consulting,UOW,UK Society for Trenchless Technolody,University of Birmingham,OSYS technology limited,Primayer Ltd,Modern Built Environment,Primayer Ltd,National Grid PLC,Site Vision Surveys (United Kingdom),Pipeline Industries Guild (United Kingdom),Utsi Electronics Ltd,SBWWI,OS,SKANSKA,Subscan Technology,Robosynthesis Limited,URS Corporation,NAS,Stratophase Ltd,INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS,RSK Group plc,National Grid plc,Leica Geosystems Ltd,CH2M HILL UNITED KINGDOM,NUAG,Morrison Utility Services,MWH UK Ltd,Infotec Consulting,BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Radiodetection Ltd,US National Academy of Sciences,IDS Ingegneria Dei Sistemi S.p.A,,ATI Projects Ltd,Amey Plc,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,MWH UK Ltd,Macleod Simmonds Ltd,Corporation of the City of London, ON,Pipehawk plc,Technology Strategy Board (Innovate UK),BALFOUR BEATTY PLC,RSK Group plc,American Society of Civil Engineers ASCE,IDS Ingegneria Dei Sistemi S.p.A,,Cardno TBE,CH2M Hill (United Kingdom),Colorado School of Mines,Hydrosave UK Limited,J Murphy & Sons Limited,T2 Utility Engineers Inc,Innovate UK,UK Society for Trenchless Technology,OSYS Technology Ltd,United Utilities Water PLC,Halcrow Group Ltd,Globe Performance Solutions,Louisiana Tech University,Globe Performance Solutions,Halcrow Group Limited,Site Vision Surveys Ltd,Keller Ltd,Bristol Water Plc,UTSI Electronics Ltd,The Institution of Civil Engineers,Watershed Associates,National Underground Assets Group Ltd,COSTAIN LTD,Skanska UK Plc,Underground Imaging Technologies UIT,Yorkshire Water,Network Rail Ltd,UKRI,Pipeline Industries Guild,ATI Projects Ltd,T2 Utility Engineers Inc,Ordnance Survey,PIPEHAWK PLC,Exova,Underground Imaging Technologies UIT,Robosynthesis Limited,URS Corporation,UKWIR,University of Birmingham,University of Louisiana System,PBA,DSTL,Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),United Utilities,Exova,UK Water Industry Research Ltd (UKWIR),Costain Ltd,ICE,LTU,Radiodetection Ltd,Morrison Utility Services,Peter Brett Associates,Keller Ltd,Corporation of the City of London, ONFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/K021699/1Funder Contribution: 5,782,840 GBPThe surface urban transport infrastructures - our roads, cycle ways, pedestrian areas, tramways and railways - are supported by the ground, and hence the properties of the ground must control to a significant degree their structural performance. The utility services infrastructure - the pipes and cables that deliver utility services to our homes and which supports urban living - is usually buried beneath our urban streets, that is it lies below the surface transport infrastructure (usually roads and paved pedestrian areas). It follows that streetworks to install, replace, repair or maintain these utility service pipes or cables using traditional trench excavations will disrupt traffic and people movement, and will often significantly damage the surface transport infrastructure and the ground on which it bears. It is clear, therefore, that the ground and physical (i.e. utility service and surface transport) infrastructures exist according to a symbiotic relationship: intervene physically in one, and the others are almost inevitably affected in some way, either immediately or in the future. Moreover the physical condition of the pipes and cables, of the ground and of the overlying road structure, is consequently of crucial importance in determining the nature and severity of the impacts that streetworks cause. Assessing the Underworld (ATU) aims to use geophysical sensors deployed both on the surface and inside water pipes to determine remotely (that is, without excavation) the condition of these urban assets. ATU builds on the highly successful Mapping the Underworld (MTU) project funded by EPSRC's first IDEAS Factory (or sandpit) and supported by many industry partners. The MTU sandpit brought together a team that has grown to be acknowledged as international leaders in this field. ATU introduces leaders in climate change, infrastructure policy, engineering sustainability and pipeline systems to the MTU team to take the research into a new sphere of influence as part of a 25-year vision to make streetworks more sustainable. ATU proposes to develop the geophysical sensors created in MTU to look for different targets: indications that the buried pipes and cables are showing signs of degradation or failure, indications that the road structure is showing signs of degradation (e.g. cracking, delamination or wetting) and indications that the ground has properties different to unaltered ground (e.g. wetted or eroded by leaking pipes, loosened by local trench excavations, wetted by water ingress through cracked road structures). For example, a deteriorated (fractured, laterally displaced, corroded or holed) pipe will give a different response to the geophysical sensors than a pristine pipe, while wetting of the adjacent soil or voids created by local erosion due to leakage from a water-bearing pipe will result in a different ground response to unaltered natural soil or fill. Similarly a deteriorated road (with vertical cracks, or with a wetted foundation) will give a different response to intact, coherent bound layers sitting on a properly drained foundation. Taking the information provided by the geophysical sensors and combining it with records for the pipes, cables and roads, and introducing deterioration models for these physical infrastructures knowing their age and recorded condition (where this information is available), will allow a means of predicting how they will react if a trench is dug in a particular road. In some cases alternative construction techniques could avert serious damage (e.g. water pipe bursts, road structural failure requiring complete reconstruction) or injury (gas pipe busts). Making this information available will be achieved by creating a Decision Support System for streetworks engineers. Finally, the full impacts to the economy, society and environment of streetworks will be modelled in a sustainability assessment framework so that the wider impacts of the works are made clear.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2023Partners:DFO, CAS, University of Southampton, University of Melbourne, UofC +87 partnersDFO,CAS,University of Southampton,University of Melbourne,UofC,Fugro EMU Limited,Department of Fisheries and Oceans,Federal University of Lavras,Hydro Tasmania,DEFRA,Chalmers University of Technology,SNL,Federal University of Lavras,Buro Happold Limited,Humboldt State University,Buro Happold,Washington University in St. Louis,Nova Scotia Department of Energy,LR IMEA,Nanyang Technological University,CEFAS,Hydro Tasmania,EA,United States Department of the Interior,University of California, Berkeley,Chalmers University of Technology,University of California (to be replaced,EDF ENERGY NUCLEAR GENERATION LIMITED,University of Washington,Wessex Water Services Ltd,British Energy Generation Ltd,TU Delft,U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),Fisheries and Oceans Canada,National Grid PLC,University of Calgary,Department of the Army,CEMIG,National Grid plc,Arup Group Ltd,Fugro EMU Limited,Kilbride Group,China Three Gorges University,BURO HAPPOLD LIMITED,United States Department of the Interior,RWE Generation,Network Rail Ltd,Southern Water Plc,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Sandia National Laboratories,University of Southampton,Chinese Academy of Science,RWE npower,Kilbride Group,Humboldt State University,TWI Ltd,Federal University of Sao Joao del Rei,CEMIG,The Welding Institute,Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science,Environment Agency,Southampton City Council,Thames Water Utilities Limited,U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),Southampton City Council,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,ORNL,China Three Gorges University,UOW,Oak Ridge National Laboratory,Lloyd's Register EMEA,Department of the Army,Nova Scotia Department of Energy,W J Groundwater Ltd,Arup Group,Thames Water (United Kingdom),EDF Energy Nuclear Generation Ltd,United States Department of the Interior,Uppsala University,[no title available],Southern Water Plc,W J Groundwater Ltd,University of Wollongong,Network Rail,NTU,NNSA,Federal University of Sao Joao del Rei,WESSEX WATER,University of Washington,Sandia National Laboratories,Lloyd's Register,Chinese Academy of SciencesFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L01582X/1Funder Contribution: 3,149,530 GBPUK economic growth, security, and sustainability are in danger of being compromised due to insufficient infrastructure supply. This partly reflects a recognised skills shortage in Engineering and the Physical Sciences. The proposed EPSRC funded Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) aims to produce the next generation of engineers and scientists needed to meet the challenge of providing Sustainable Infrastructure Systems critical for maintaining UK competitiveness. The CDT will focus on Energy, Water, and Transport in the priority areas of National Infrastructure Systems, Sustainable Built Environment, and Water. Future Engineers and Scientists must have a wide range of transferable and technical skills and be able to collaborate at the interdisciplinary interface. Key attributes include leadership, the ability to communicate and work as a part of a large multidisciplinary network, and to think outside the box to develop creative and innovative solutions to novel problems. The CDT will be based on a cohort ethos to enhance educational efficiency by integrating best practices of traditional longitudinal top-down / bottom-up learning with innovative lateral knowledge exchange through peer-to-peer "coaching" and outreach. To inspire the next generation of engineers and scientists an outreach supply chain will link the focal student within his/her immediate cohort with: 1) previous and future cohorts; 2) other CDTs within and outside the University of Southampton; 3) industry; 4) academics; 5) the general public; and 6) Government. The programme will be composed of a first year of transferable and technical taught elements followed by 3 years of dedicated research with the opportunity to select further technical modules, and/or spend time in industry, and experience international training placements. Development of expertise will culminate in an individual project aligned to the relevant research area where the skills acquired are practiced. Cohort building and peer-to-peer learning will be on-going throughout the programme, with training in leadership, communication, and problem solving delivered through initiatives such as a team building residential course; a student-led seminar series and annual conference; a Group Design Project (national or international); and industry placement. The cohort will also mentor undergraduates and give outreach presentations to college students, school children, and other community groups. All activities are designed to facilitate the creation of a larger network. Students will be supported throughout the programme by their supervisory team, intensively at the start, through weekly tutorials during which a technical skills gap analysis will be conducted to inform future training needs. Benefitting from the £120M investment in the new Engineering Campus at the Boldrewood site the CDT will provide a high class education environment with access to state-of-the-art computer and experimental facilities, including large-scale research infrastructure, e.g. hydraulics laboratories with large flumes and wave tanks which are unparalleled in the UK. Students will benefit from the co-location of engineering, education, and research alongside industry users through this initiative. To provide cohort, training, inspiration and research legacies the CDT will deliver: 1) Sixty doctoral graduates in engineering and science with a broad understanding of the challenges faced by the Energy, Water, and Transport industries and the specialist technical skills needed to solve them. They will be ambitious research, engineering, industrial, and political leaders of the future with an ability to demonstrate creativity and innovation when working as part of teams. 2) A network of home-grown talent, comprising of several CDT cohorts, with a greater capability to solve the "Big Problems" than individuals, or small isolated clusters of expertise, typically generated through traditional training programmes.
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