On 9 July, over 70 participants attended the SIA mid-term webinar; attendees included infrastructure managers, EU representatives, industry and academia from all over the world, including Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Austria, Japan and the United Kingdom.
The webinar was moderated by Madeleine McCreadie, Project Manager at Nottingham Scientific Limited (NSL) and partner of the project. As part of the event, Daniel Lopour, Project officer at the European GNSS Agency (GSA) presented the agency and how SIA fits into their work programme. Unai Alvarado, Project Coordinator of SIA from CEIT then gave an overview of the project. Following this, the various modules of the system developed were presented such as the positioning system including the benefits European GNSS provides, the wheel to rail interaction monitoring module, the pantograph to catenary interaction monitoring module and the SIA Visualisation Platform.
Overall, the SIA project aims at developing four ready-to-use new services (iWheelMon, iRailMon, iPantMon and iCatMon) to provide prognostic information about the health status of the railway’s most demanding assets in terms of maintenance costs (the wheel, rail, pantograph and catenary). The Visualisation Platform is paramount and will enable end-users to exploit the full capabilities of the SIA system. Thanks to this interface, SIA becomes a powerful GIS solution supported by well-established open source technologies.
Event highlights:
- Project overview (CEIT)
- SIA system description (CEIT)
- Positioning system and EGNSS benefits (NSL)
- Wheel-Rail interaction (DLR)
- Pantograph-Catenary interaction (CEIT)
- SIA Visualisation Platform (Ingecontrol)
- Q&A
Access to the recording of the webinar:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n854QMTTwDA&t=14s
Access to all presentations delivered during this event: https://siaproject.eu/2020/07/15/the-h2020-gnss-funded-sia-project-held-its-mid-term-event-remotely-on-9-july-2020/
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and from the European Global Navigation Satellite Systems Agency under grant agreement #776402 (SIA).