Back to the Bently roads solution

 

KDOT Integrates Assets With Bentley Software for Better Informed Decisions: Exor Software Interfaces With Data Repositories to Eliminate Redundancies and Provide Additional Value With No Additional Data Maintenance
Prior to implementing the Exor suite of asset management solutions, KDOT used mainframe technology to coordinate its asset data. One of the difficulties faced by the state in using such a restrictive system was KDOT’s inability to expand or add reporting features onto outdated systems. Bradley added, “We initially looked at moving away from the mainframe. However, when we began investigating the market [for a new system] it became apparent that contemporary solutions existed in the market that would deliver significant advantages to us far beyond the benefits of a standard mainframe switch.”

US Army Corps of Engineers
The Army is currently undergoing a transformation to meet global changes. In 2006, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) joined Bentley’s Enterprise License Subscription.

North Carolina DOT: Interstate 26
Using MicroStation and GEOPAK, NCDOT was able to address unique construction and environmental challenges while creating a cost-effective design. It has been called one of the last great earthmoving projects in the United States—I-26 through North Carolina’s Appalachian Mountains.

Kentucky Transportation Cabinet: I264 at Westport Road
The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet central office design team applied their experience with InRoads and MicroStation to the content management capabilities of Bentley ProjectWise for change control of all project files and better project communication. When the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet inherited this interchange and expansion project, it was three years behind schedule, surrounded by rapid suburban growth and documented by hundreds of unorganized design files.

HNTB
TrueViz OnTarget. Developed in partnership with the Range and Training Land Program of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, TrueViz OnTarget maximized the efficiency of planning and designing training facilities in Kansas City, Missouri.

The Banks Group
Centralized data storage using StartPoint and Riverbed WAN Optimization. The Banks Group needed real-time access to design and office documents at many locations. In the past this was achieved using remote copy procedures or a complicated setup of distributed file systems and WAN infrastructure.