News - Construction News
Map of underground pipes and cables to prevent disruption
29 Apr 19

The government is producing a detailed map of underground pipes and cables to prevent disruption due to accidental damage.
It is hoped the map, led by the government’s Geospatial Commission using existing data, will prevent disruption to utility networks as well as protect workers from accidental damage. The Underground Asset Register will detail the location of phone cables, electricity cables, water pipes, and gas pipes.
Currently, the whereabouts of certain pipe and cable networks are detailed on individual company sites but there is no national combined register. Prototypes are currently in use in Sunderland and London which allow workers to access maps on phones and computers before they start projects.
David Henderson, the managing director of Ordnance Survey Great Britain, said: “The creation of an underground map of utility assets has long been an ambition of Ordnance Survey. And over the last year we have been working closely with Northumbrian Water and a consortia of utility companies and local authorities in the North East of England, to explore how accurate geospatial data can improve underground infrastructure maintenance and inform new-build development projects.”
“The investment being made by the Geospatial Commission will ultimately enable the utility industry to more efficiently access, use and share data describing otherwise hidden infrastructure, thereby reducing operational costs, minimising disruption and accelerating completion of site works.”
It is estimated that accidental damage to pipes and cables costs around £2.2billion a year. As well as causing damage to vital infrastructure and disruption, it can be extremely dangerous for construction and maintenance workers who accidentally strike them.
In the North East, the prototype has been developed by the Ordnance Survey along with Northumbrian Water, Northern Gas Networks, Northern Powergrid, and Openreach. The London project is being led by the Greater London Authority with local infrastructure providers and authorities.
If you would like to read more articles like this then please click here.
If you are interested in finding out more about key infrastructure trends today, you may wish to attend the flagship infrastructure exhibition at the NEC next week: UKIS 2019
Register for your delegate place now: UK Infrastructure Show 2019.
More News
- Wales invests £655,000 to train the next generation of housing workers
10 Apr 26
Workers across Wales will gain new skills in housing, construction and retrofit, as the Welsh
- Why the Future of Architecture Is Grown, Not Manufactured
9 Apr 26
Bio-based materials offer a significant opportunity to reduce embodied carbon.
- Templant joins Camfaud Group following acquisition
8 Apr 26
Essex-based temporary power provider Templant has been acquired by Camfaud Group, the UK’s largest concrete
-
-
Latest News
- Wales invests £655,000 to train the next generation of housing workers
10 Apr 26
Workers across Wales will gain new skills in housing, construction and retrofit, as the Welsh
- Why the Future of Architecture Is Grown, Not Manufactured
9 Apr 26
Bio-based materials offer a significant opportunity to reduce embodied carbon.
- Templant joins Camfaud Group following acquisition
8 Apr 26
Essex-based temporary power provider Templant has been acquired by Camfaud Group, the UK’s largest concrete
- Seven new towns proposed to kickstart housebuilding push
8 Apr 26
The UK Government has unveiled a landmark initiative to catalyse housebuilding.
- It’s time to pay up!
7 Apr 26
The UK Government has introduced the most stringent package of measures on late payments in
- Government outlines reforms of Industry Training Boards to boost construction and engineering skills
3 Apr 26
The UK Government has initiated a significant reform of the national skills training infrastructure with
-
-





