Colas, Volvo Collaborate on Safety Project

Colas and Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) have been working to collaborate on a project that has seen the company develop and test a range of concepts and prototypes that contribute towards improved work site safety. 

As part of the “Safer@Work” research project, Volvo CE recently tested a people-detection system at two Colas sites: an asphalt plant and a quarry in Switzerland. The concept uses Artificial Intelligence (AI) to alert the operator when a person is detected in the vicinity of the machine. It incorporates different warning systems, both for the operator and for people in the area surrounding the machine.

Volvo CE engineers were already developing the integrated AI algorithm and it was further improved during the Safer@Work project. The prototype is one of three operator assist concepts that Volvo CE and Colas have been collaborating since 2016. Currently this work is part of a research project to prove the technology is viable for the industry. Plans for industrialization are under investigation. 

“We wanted to partner with a construction equipment manufacturer and create an innovative safety system that would reduce the number of accidents involving people on construction sites,” said Philippe Simarik, prevention, health and safety director at Colas. “Given that we share core values, especially safety, Volvo CE was the ideal choice. We are working together to develop and test various new ideas. The most mature of those ideas is the people detection concept, and we hope to equip our machines with this system in the future. Our collaboration with Volvo CE has been extremely positive, together we have come up with a solution that will improve work site safety.”

“Safety is one of Volvo CE’s core values and we are actively working to create even safer work sites for employees, customers and anyone in the vicinity of our machines,” said Veit Kleeberg, chief project manager for Safer@Work at Volvo CE. “When Colas approached us to partner on this research project we were keen to get involved. We used the ‘Design Thinking’ methodology – which involves putting the user first and finding out their needs before generating ideas – and came up with 27 concepts that could contribute to reducing the number of accidents involving employees and members of the public on construction sites. Together with Colas, we picked the three preferred concepts and we started to design and test them.”

The latest tests in Switzerland, on March 27th, marked the third round of testing and demonstrations that Volvo CE has carried out on excavators, wheel loaders and articulated haulers at Colas job sites. The people detection concept was tested on a EW160E excavator and a L220H wheel loader. 

Colas owns construction and aggregates operations all over the world, including in the United States.

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