Part Two
The Railway Corridor: How to model, manage and visualise complex linear assets using Maximo’s Linear Asset Management and embedded GIS.
James Foley [email protected]
© 2014 Enterprise AMS Group Ltd
Introduction • James Foley – EAMS Director of Asset Management & Engineering
• I sit between the ‘visionaries’ (who help define AM & Business Strategy) and the
‘technologists’ (who design & build the infrastructure, systems, mobile, integration,
reporting etc) and lead the design of the business processes and implement them
into the business
• Passionate about using Enterprise Asset Management (EAM) to enable UK
Transportation to be world class
• EAMS Group is a Consultancy based in UK, US and Australia, with a major focus on
Rail Industry
• Simple mission “to enable our clients to become world class in asset and safety
management”
• Today’s case study is based on railways but the concepts are applicable to any
organisation that has linear assets
Contents
• Why we need to do this?
• The Railway Corridor concept
• What is a Linear Asset?
• How Linear Assets are modelled in Maximo 7.5
• Data Requirements
• It’s all about the Business Process
• Linear in the field – going mobile
• Visualising linear assets:
• GIS
• Metro Maximo GIS Map Tab
• Business Benefits Realisation
• Some closing thoughts
Why we need to do this?
Source: http://www.railstaff.co.uk/print-archive/
The Railway Corridor
The Railway Corridor is how we describe the 3D envelope that the railway runs through. It is a complex system of assets whose maintenance and performance are linked to each other but which traditionally have been modelled and managed in isolation.
The Railway Corridor
The next level of complexity – the Eastern approach to Clapham Junction Station, the busiest in the UK in terms of train movements.
What is a Linear Asset? A linear asset: • Has length & has attributes that change along its length • Can be part of a hierarchy but also uses relationships to relate it to other linear
and/or discrete assets
An asset should be modelled as linear if you want to: • Understand its spatial relationship to other assets in the railway corridor • Understand the distribution of faults along its length • Vary how you Inspection and Maintain it along its length • Visualise all of the above in a GIS and/or BIM application (ideally inside of your
EAM system) Note you could model linear assets using an EAM system’s discrete asset functionality but you lose the ability to manage the asset spatially
Line Branch Concept
Line-Branch concept: • Most linear assets form part of a network • Some lines are easier to model than others • Splitting the railway in to logical branches enables us to manage the complexity
Branch Model – The Corridor
Each level of the hierarchy has attributes that are common to it and everything below it
The Reference System
This particular system was developed for London Underground who use a location coding system (LCS) to navigate their railway. Any logical referencing system can be model in Metro Maximo
The Previous Continuous Asset Solution
The original linear solution (world first in Maximo) dated from 2004 and was not particularly user friendly – essentially tables of data
New Linear Asset Model in Maximo Model is based on a branch approach and supports Infrastructure Asset groups:
• Track • Signals / Controls • Civil Structures • Power (Traction Current) • Stations
You can now see relationships between assets and where faults are located along the asset
Searching on Linear Assets
New Linear Asset search function Enables searching for work orders and assets between any two LCS/offset points (inclusive).
This functionality is tailored to London Underground’s LCS system but can easily be adapted to other referencing systems.
Data Requirements - More Complex Assets
NB These are not modelled as Linear Assets but as discrete child assets sat within the S&C ‘box’
Capturing The Data
The P&C Asset Supersedes the ROAD asset; The P&C unit ‘supersedes the ROAD asset and the system will prevents the user form raising Work Orders on the ROAD at P&C locations. When the user attempts to create a WO on the ROAD or any of its RAIL assets, where start and/or end meterage is within the length of the P&C unit such as in the example below, Maximo will display an error dialogue.
Linear In the Field – Going Mobile
Functionally rich mobile solution running on a tablet extends all necessary desktop functionality into the field – these are not simple form based apps that generate basic data that has to be re-keyed into the EAM system.
Inspection Process - Review Inspection Supervisors Start Centre: Work flow forces review of new faults
Ending With Asset Register Update
When fault has been rectified, Metro Maximo prompts an asset register update. (This has even been automated for certain remedy codes)
GIS
• Map and Diagrammatic view of the railway • Linked to the live Maximo database • Searching by Location Codes
GIS • Overlay Fault Data pulled real-time from Metro Maximo • Switch to Map view with rich geographic data including OS Maps, Ariel
Photographs and punch outs to Bing Maps etc.
GIS • Overlay Fault Data pulled real-time from Metro Maximo • Switch to Map view with rich geographic data including OS Maps, Ariel
Photographs and punch outs to Bing Maps etc.
• Now take the power of GIS and put it inside of Metro Maximo • You can manage your assets and plan and schedule your maintenance
spatially in one system
Metro Maximo GIS Map Tab
• Display Faults and draw polygons around them to select a group • These faults then appear in the list tab and can be Planned and
Scheduled for completion
Metro Maximo GIS Map Tab
All within the one system
Business Benefits Realisation - 1 1. Safety – understand what assets you have, where they are and who is going to be
working on them at any given time across all asset classes.
“Railways are inherently unsafe, and it is the application of systems and controls that
make them the safe form of transport they can be”
Michael Holden, CEO Directly Operated Railways
2. Reputation – avoiding the kind of headlines shown at the start
• Keep the regulators, shareholders, employees and customers happy
3. Efficiency
• Do more work in less time using fewer people – spatial planning & scheduling cuts
travelling time
• Opportunity works in the vicinity once you have fixed the main fault
4. Asset Availability – 24x7 Railway
• Do the same amount of work in less time
Business Benefits Realisation - 2
5. Improve Asset Performance & Reliability
All asset classes managed in the same system, linear (and non-linear) relationships
are understood
6. Climate Change
Not just about the infrastructure
• Vegetation management
• Weather resilience
7. Integrated Planning and Scheduling across Asset Classes
8. Motivated Work Force
Technology that works and makes working life more productive
9. Optimising Investment Decisions (Opex vs Capex)
You have rich and accurate data fro m a single source of truth
Some Closing Thoughts
• Do establish your frame of reference and UoM early on
• DON’T design processes and systems that require perfect / complete data
• But DO design processes that encourage (force?) continuous improvement
• DON’T under-estimate the ability of good people to incorrectly complete the
most well designed Asset Register template
• DO train users in the art of capturing data, have a dedicated team of people,
implement a quality feedback loop and ideally provide a full blown mobile
application that integrates the data directly into Maximo
• Don’t retain the silos between Asset Classes
• Do take a top down approach to shared assets and understand the asset
register and maintenance interfaces
Commercial in confidence. © 2014 Enterprise AMS Group Ltd As such this publication has been prepared for general guidance on matters of interest only, and does not constitute professional advice. You should not act upon the information contained in this publication without obtaining specific professional advice. No representation or warranty (express or implied) is given as to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained in this publication, and, to the extent permitted by law, Enterprise AMS Group Ltd, its employees, associates and agents do not accept or assume any liability, responsibility or duty of care for any consequences of you or anyone else acting, or refraining to act, in reliance on the information contained in this publication or for any decision based on it.
© 2014 Enterprise AMS Group Ltd. All rights reserved. In this document, EAMS Group Ltd refers to Enterprise AMS Group Ltd