DocumentCode
895407
Title
How to See the Unseen City
Author
Upson, Sandra
Volume
44
Issue
6
fYear
2007
fDate
6/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
36
Lastpage
37
Abstract
This paper presents different methods and equipments used on how to inspect underground infrastructures, networks, sewers, and pipes in some cities around the world. In New York, underground pipes are inspected using an electronic listening equipment as its first line of defense. Maintenance workers dangle a microphone down a manhole and attach it to a water main to assess whether flow has been disturbed by a leak. More detailed checks are conducted from within a pipe, using what is essentially a video camera on wheels. In pipeline lingo, such tools are quirkily known as smart pigs. In addition to capturing a digital video, a pig can perform radar and sonar scans above and below a water line, searching for indentations and holes in the walls as it rolls down in a pipe. It records its locations with odometer wheels and may be equipped with magnetic sensors to check for aberrations in metal pipes. On the other hand, Japan is the exception on the geospatial-information services front, with a national mapping repository known as ROADIC. This underground mapping system consists of utility grids layered over a road map that utilities and builders consult before breaking ground.
Keywords
inspection; magnetic sensors; maintenance engineering; underground equipment; Japan; New York; ROADIC; digital video; electronic listening equipment; geospatial-information services; magnetic sensors; maintenance workers; metal pipes; national mapping repository; odometer wheels; radar; smart pigs; sonar scans; underground infrastructures; underground pipes; utility grids; video camera; Cables; Cities and towns; Ducts; Rails; Railway electrification; Storms; Ventilation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2007.369266
Filename
4225106
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