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Developing a heavy axle weight infrastructure interaction model for rail freight traffic

Developing a heavy axle weight infrastructure interaction model for rail freight traffic
Developing a heavy axle weight infrastructure interaction model for rail freight traffic
Faced with a combination of ageing infrastructure, changing traffic patterns, climate change impacts and the need for modal shift to rail, freight train operators and railway infrastructure managers need improved methods and tools for the planning and management of freight train paths and infrastructure maintenance, renewals and enhancement. Since underbridges tend to be the limiting factor for the accommodation of heavy axle weight freight traffic, they require particular attention. To meet these needs, new methods and an integrated tool were developed to visualise the railway network and its assets, and to model the routeing of freight services and the degradation of underbridges, the interactions between traffic and the bridges, and the impacts and constraints they impose on each other. The integrated modelling tool combines data from a range of sources in an online geospatial database, making use of industry standard, open-source techniques and tools, and thus maximising reliability and deployment flexibility and the scope for further expansion of the system. The database interacts with bespoke structural degradation modelling tools to determine the impacts of traffic on bridges and vice versa. Work is continuing to extend the model’s coverage from an initial exemplar route to Britain’s full national railway network, and the possibility of expanding its coverage to include additional infrastructure asset categories is being considered.
Armstrong, John
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Sadler, Jason
1fa395f9-b780-4294-9e51-5fafdd588899
Blainey, Simon
468c6640-a463-47cf-b8f7-f3f99e681bc8
Watson, Geoff
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Powrie, William
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Kashani, Mehdi
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Harkness, John
026f02e8-41d9-403f-83be-0d880058ecf1
Zhang, Ziliang
1fca0696-ebe9-4ea3-913b-a7ae0888783b
Anderson, Rod
2f33eaf8-2e77-4d75-8ff8-09796e122797
Armstrong, John
5fafa91e-39c1-4d1d-a331-564558aaa638
Sadler, Jason
1fa395f9-b780-4294-9e51-5fafdd588899
Blainey, Simon
468c6640-a463-47cf-b8f7-f3f99e681bc8
Watson, Geoff
a7b86a0a-9a2c-44d2-99ed-a6c02b2a356d
Powrie, William
600c3f02-00f8-4486-ae4b-b4fc8ec77c3c
Kashani, Mehdi
d1074b3a-5853-4eb5-a4ef-7d741b1c025d
Harkness, John
026f02e8-41d9-403f-83be-0d880058ecf1
Zhang, Ziliang
1fca0696-ebe9-4ea3-913b-a7ae0888783b
Anderson, Rod
2f33eaf8-2e77-4d75-8ff8-09796e122797

Armstrong, John, Sadler, Jason, Blainey, Simon, Watson, Geoff, Powrie, William, Kashani, Mehdi, Harkness, John, Zhang, Ziliang and Anderson, Rod (2025) Developing a heavy axle weight infrastructure interaction model for rail freight traffic. World Congress on Railway Research, , Cologne, Germany. 25 - 29 Nov 2001. 6 pp .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Faced with a combination of ageing infrastructure, changing traffic patterns, climate change impacts and the need for modal shift to rail, freight train operators and railway infrastructure managers need improved methods and tools for the planning and management of freight train paths and infrastructure maintenance, renewals and enhancement. Since underbridges tend to be the limiting factor for the accommodation of heavy axle weight freight traffic, they require particular attention. To meet these needs, new methods and an integrated tool were developed to visualise the railway network and its assets, and to model the routeing of freight services and the degradation of underbridges, the interactions between traffic and the bridges, and the impacts and constraints they impose on each other. The integrated modelling tool combines data from a range of sources in an online geospatial database, making use of industry standard, open-source techniques and tools, and thus maximising reliability and deployment flexibility and the scope for further expansion of the system. The database interacts with bespoke structural degradation modelling tools to determine the impacts of traffic on bridges and vice versa. Work is continuing to extend the model’s coverage from an initial exemplar route to Britain’s full national railway network, and the possibility of expanding its coverage to include additional infrastructure asset categories is being considered.

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More information

Published date: November 2025
Venue - Dates: World Congress on Railway Research, , Cologne, Germany, 2001-11-25 - 2001-11-29

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504564
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504564
PURE UUID: bffc3da3-6232-4b34-a1b0-62b0dcf735b8
ORCID for John Armstrong: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2648-6307
ORCID for Geoff Watson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3074-5196
ORCID for William Powrie: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2271-0826
ORCID for Mehdi Kashani: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0008-0007
ORCID for John Harkness: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0908-0791

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 15 Sep 2025 16:44
Last modified: 16 Sep 2025 02:07

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Contributors

Author: John Armstrong ORCID iD
Author: Jason Sadler
Author: Simon Blainey
Author: Geoff Watson ORCID iD
Author: William Powrie ORCID iD
Author: Mehdi Kashani ORCID iD
Author: John Harkness ORCID iD
Author: Ziliang Zhang
Author: Rod Anderson

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