Reporter Construction Edition

This edition explores how heavy construction professionals digitise operations from design to maintenance, helping professionals realise gains in cost and time savings and increased safety.

President’s Message  

Construction plays a vital role in supporting economies for healthy societies. From infrastructure projects that keep people and goods moving safely to business, commercial, institutional and residential buildings that provide for essential community needs, the construction industry is relied upon for moving civilisation forward.  

Today, the construction industry is in the midst of a disruptive revolution that changes how work is done, how construction professionals’ skills are developed, and how customers interact with construction organisations. The Fourth Industrial Revolution, characterized by a fusion of technologies that is bringing together physical, digital and biological spheres, collectively referred to as cyber-physical systems, has brought about the advent of Digital Construction – improving construction operations and processes with digital solutions. Digital Construction encompasses many things, such as 3D digital modelling of entire construction sites and visualising end-to-end construction project workflows. This evolution enables the industry to be more efficient, productive and accurate while also increasing safety.   

When constructing the world’s largest tunnel connecting Germany and Denmark, the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link, efficiency gains are key to stay on track and budget. Danish construction company Holbøll A/S is using digital machine control solutions on its dozers and excavators to build slopes for the project. The company has experienced significant time savings as the operators are able to move more dirt in less time while reducing rework.      

An excavation project in the heart of the Amazon on the Madeira River provided operators zero visibility for the removal of submerged cofferdam material. By creating a 3D digital model of the under-water environment with machine control technology, the Brazilian construction company Grupo Toni-olo was able to remove the material on the first try and avoid the dangers of sending employees into the unknown site.

A 193-kilometre highway project between the two major Chinese cities of Nanning and Liuzhou was the first in the country to use 3D paving technology. Guangxi Road and Bridge Engineering Group recognised the need to advance from stringlines and employed digital solutions to better protect workers, decrease project delivery time and increase smoothness quality.  
 
As a core focus, Hexagon provides the means for digitalising construction. Our construction solutions integrate data to create seamless workflows and make entire projects safer and more efficient due to increased productivity through greater integration of technologies. We deliver a construction information management system that empowers executives with top-down visibility, control and management while connecting professionals in the field seamlessly and simply to the day-to-day tasks.
Enjoy your read. 

 

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Juergen Dold
President, Hexagon Geosystems

Read our customer stories here:



Building roads in Belgium with 3D stringless paving

3D stringless paving for building a road ramp up to a bridge in Belgium

Snow grooming for world cups

Creating the piste for the World Cup in ski cross and speed skiing in Idre Fjäll, Sweden using Leica iCON alpine snow management solution

Building a fast track between Germany and Denmark

Preparing the way for the world’s largest tunnel with machine control solutions in Denmark

Synchronising workflows with machine control


Increasing the efficiency of demolition work with Leica Geosystems’ machine control solutions in Australia

Clark Builders’ secret to fast, accurate layout

Cutting-edge digital layout technology to empower a top-ranking general contractor to deliver exceptional service in Canada

3D PaveSmart in China

Extension of the Liuzhou to Nanning Highway

Introducing the 3D paving technology to the Chinese market

Connecting Denmark with machine control

Building a motorway between Herning and Holstebro in Denmark with machine control

IDS Georadar in the Alps

Anticipating the ice avalanche with radar data

Interferometric radar for safety in critical ice avalanche monitoring in Switzerland

5 ways to increase accuracy and productivity using machine control on a job site

Tips on how to improve the quality on a jobsite with easy-to-use and intuitive hardware and software for heavy construction.
Tips on how to improve the quality on a jobsite with easy-to-use and intuitive hardware and software for heavy construction.

Building the Venice of the North

Building the world’s second largest tunnel crossing the Swedish capital using machine control

Improving infrastructure with automated machine control

Converting summer house area into permanent residencies with machine control in Sweden

MS420

New dredging sensors at work in Port of Esbjerg

Impoving dredging operations for underwater applications

From Harbourscape to cityscape

3D machine control in use for the transformation of Aarhus inner harbour from industrial harbour to urban space.

Intelligent Construction

Taking Intelligent Construction to a new level

Leica Geosystems’ machine control delivers game-changing platforms to help companies prepare for the digital disruption.

Digitalising construction

New cloud solution and web interface helping to digitalise the construction industry

Building the longest road in Greenland

Using 3D excavation technology to construct Greenland’s longest road

Let it flow

Using 3D excavator system solution for a “blind” underwater mission.

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