ACHILLES: the benefits and costs of increased asset information
ACHILLES: the benefits and costs of increased asset information
The ACHILLES research programme is providing improved understanding of earthworks deterioration mechanisms, and of earthworks performance with and without engineering interventions and the associated lifecycle cost implications. It is also developing decision support methods to inform intervention strategies and reduce whole-life costs. One of the novel aspects of ACHILLES is that it looks beyond the costs and benefits of the deterioration of assets and their remediation to consider the costs and benefits of the various existing and potential sources of data and information on earthworks condition, on the safety, engineering and wider social implications of earthworks failures, and on the engineering and general social impacts of preventive measures to improve earthworks condition. The aim of this aspect of the work is to maximise the ratio of the benefits (safety, engineering and social) obtained from the data to the costs incurred in its collection and analysis. This aspect of ACHILLES is based upon the review of current and potentially available sources of data on earthworks condition, remediation costs and the impacts and benefits of earthworks failures and reactive/proactive interventions. The costs of obtaining and processing different data sources are compared with their potential accuracy, and their contribution to understanding and overall benefits. The work aims for generality where possible, but also takes account of the situation- and location-specific influences on failure and intervention costs.
Earthworks, Data, Costs, Benefits
Armstrong, J.
5fafa91e-39c1-4d1d-a331-564558aaa638
Preston, J.
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b
August 2022
Armstrong, J.
5fafa91e-39c1-4d1d-a331-564558aaa638
Preston, J.
ef81c42e-c896-4768-92d1-052662037f0b
Armstrong, J. and Preston, J.
(2022)
ACHILLES: the benefits and costs of increased asset information.
Pombo, J.
(ed.)
In Proceedings of The Fifth International Conference on Railway Technology: Research, Development and Maintenance.
vol. CCC 1,
Civil-Comp Press.
5 pp
.
(doi:10.4203/ccc.1.27.2).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
The ACHILLES research programme is providing improved understanding of earthworks deterioration mechanisms, and of earthworks performance with and without engineering interventions and the associated lifecycle cost implications. It is also developing decision support methods to inform intervention strategies and reduce whole-life costs. One of the novel aspects of ACHILLES is that it looks beyond the costs and benefits of the deterioration of assets and their remediation to consider the costs and benefits of the various existing and potential sources of data and information on earthworks condition, on the safety, engineering and wider social implications of earthworks failures, and on the engineering and general social impacts of preventive measures to improve earthworks condition. The aim of this aspect of the work is to maximise the ratio of the benefits (safety, engineering and social) obtained from the data to the costs incurred in its collection and analysis. This aspect of ACHILLES is based upon the review of current and potentially available sources of data on earthworks condition, remediation costs and the impacts and benefits of earthworks failures and reactive/proactive interventions. The costs of obtaining and processing different data sources are compared with their potential accuracy, and their contribution to understanding and overall benefits. The work aims for generality where possible, but also takes account of the situation- and location-specific influences on failure and intervention costs.
Text
ACHILLES - the benefits and costs of increased asset information
- Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 21 June 2022
Published date: August 2022
Keywords:
Earthworks, Data, Costs, Benefits
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473654
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473654
PURE UUID: 68c14b80-eb51-4f47-86cc-2a21aa453c0e
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 26 Jan 2023 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:04
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Editor:
J. Pombo
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics