Utility location is the process of
identifying and labeling public utility mains that are underground. These mains
may include lines for telecommunication, electricity distribution, natural gas,
cable television, fiber optics, traffic lights, street lights, storm drains,
water mains, and wastewater pipes. In some locations, major oil and gas
pipelines, national defense communication lines, mass transit, rail and road
tunnels also compete for space underground.
Description
Public utility systems are often run
underground; some by the very nature of their function, others for convenience
or aesthetics. Before digging, local governments often require that the
underground systems' locations be denoted and approved, if it is to be in the
public right-of-way.
Because of the many different types of
materials that go into manufacturing each of the different types of underground
lines, different detection and location methods must be used. For metal pipes
and cables, this is often done with electromagnetic equipment consisting of a
transmitter and a receiver. For other types of pipe, such as plastic or
concrete, other types of radiolocation or modern ground-penetrating radar must
be used. Location by these technical means is necessary because maps often lack
the pinpoint precision needed to ensure proper clearance. In older cities, it
is especially a problem since maps may be very inaccurate, or may be missing
entirely.
A few utilities are permanently marked with
short posts or bollards, mainly for lines carrying petroleum products. This may
be done because of venting requirements, and also serves to indicate the
location of underground facilities that are especially hazardous if disturbed.
Telephone hotlines
"Call before you dig", "Know
What's Below! Dig With Confidence!", "Dial before you dig",
"Digger's Hotline", "One-call", "Miss Utility",
"Dig Safe", "Click before you dig", or Underground Service
Alert are services that allow construction workers or homeowners to contact
utility companies, who will then denote where underground utilities are located
via color-coded markings typically up to and not past the user's service
connection or meter. Lines on the other side of the meter or service connection
are considered to be part of the customer's property and will typically not be
located by these services.
Failure to call such a number ahead of time
may result in a fine or even a criminal charge against a person or company,
particularly if such negligence causes a major utility outage or serious
accident, or an evacuation due to a gas leak. Hitting a water main may also
trigger local flooding or require a boil-water advisory.
The following are the partial list of
countries with one-call for utility location:
United Kingdom: In Scotland there is an
online web based service called Vault (short for Scottish Community Apparatus
Data Vault), which allows registered users to specify a polygon on a map and
immediately obtain an interactive map of all major undertakers owning
underground assets, except the principal telecoms operators). In the rest of
the UK ,
there is no dial-before-you-dig service. Instead the onus is on excavators to
ensure that they do not damage buried services. This has resulted in a class of
locating tools which are simpler to use, and are called Cable Avoidance Tools
(CATs), and the associated signal detectors are called Gennys.
Color-coding
while digging holes for trees, shrubs, or
other large plants or fenceposts. This is also important because a vehicle
(tractor, truck, or otherwise) can break a sprinkler or the hard-PVC pipe or
joint it is mounted on, simply by driving over it, particularly on newly moved
soil which is uncompacted and therefore unsupportive of such weight.
The national standard for Australia uses
the following color guide:
Orange electricity
Yellow gas
Blue water
White communications
Red fire
services
Cream sewerage
Purple reclaimed
water
Silver/Gray steam
Brown oils,
flammable liquids
Light blue air
Pink Unidentified
services
Black other
liquids
In the United States , the American Public
Works Association (APWA) Uniform Color Codes for temporary marking of
underground utilities are listed below:
Red electric
power lines, cables, conduit, and lighting cables
Orange telecommunication,
alarm or signal lines, cables, or conduit
Yellow natural
gas, oil, steam, petroleum, or other gaseous or flammable material
Green sewers
and drain lines
Blue drinking
water
Purple reclaimed
water, irrigation, and slurry lines
Pink temporary
survey markings, unknown/unidentified facilities
White proposed
excavation limits or route
Some municipalities use the pink paint to
make lines and codes on the pavements related to required street improvements
such as ramp replacement, asphalt grinding and form injection. These markings
are not related to utility locating.
In Canada , the provinces adopt the use
of APWA Uniform Color Codes.
The India
uses a convention similar to the US one, for marking underground
utilities, such as telephone, gas, water and electricity. The system is based
entirely on convention without any written standard. These markings are
color-coded, and are painted by contractors onto the pavement.
The main colors based on the convention are
used in the same way as in the US :
red for electricity; yellow for gas; blue for water. However, other colors have
other meanings. Green is used for telecommunication conduits. White is used as
general communication between contractors. It is also used to note the details
of road surface markings so that markings can be easily restored after the road
construction is completed. A few telecommunication companies also use white
color for their utility locations. Orange
and other colors are used by local authorities to mark improvements and other
details not related to utility locations.
Source From Wikipedia
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