Drones revolutionising Gauteng’s management of infrastructure projects

9th November 2018

By: Rebecca Campbell

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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The Gauteng Department of Infrastructure Development (DID), with the assistance of the University of Johannesburg’s (UJ’s) Centre for Applied Research and Innovation in the Built Environment, is achieving unprecedented monitoring of the infrastructure development and construction projects that it is executing on behalf of the Gauteng provincial government. This has been achieved by combining digital imagery from remotely/piloted aircraft systems (popularly called drones) with three-dimensional (3D) computer modelling and information technology systems.

This is the result of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the DID and UJ in July, aimed at improving the delivery of public infrastructure by using smart technologies. “The DID, through that MoU, is also trying to introduce a new way of doing things – that is, a government department working with a university,” highlighted Gauteng MEC for Infrastructure Development Jacob Mamabolo on announcing the significant impact achieved by the drone programme in only a few months. “Universities are depositories of scientific knowledge.

“When we launched the drone programme, we had one drone,” he pointed out. “Subsequently, we bought four; so, we now have five – one in each region.” (Gauteng is divided by the provincial government into five ‘development corridors, or regions.)

The drones are used to take high-resolution images, time- and date-stamped and with satellite navigation system location coordinates, of projects being built or renovated under contracts awarded by the DID (usually for other provincial government departments). Hundreds of images are taken on each mission, allowing the creation and updating of 3D computer models of the project.

These models are overlaid on the approved architectural drawings of the project, and can be examined from any angle and with a considerable enlargement capability (picture resolution is a few centimetres). This means that any deviation from the approved plans can be rapidly identified and queried. (Such deviations are often perfectly legitimate, but now they can be queried early and, if illegitimate, reversed, instead of only being discovered when it is too late to do anything about them).

The system also allows the monitoring of the delivery of materials (sand, bricks and so on) to the sites, and the calculation of the volume of such materials on the sites – all by combining drone imagery with the appropriate data processing software. This means that the DID is no longer dependent on statements made by contractors, and wastage is significantly reduced.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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