
These web pages reproduce the executive summary of
the Britpave publication Slabtrack Safety – A Scoping Study..
Visit the Britpave Shop to purchase Slabtrack Safety – A Scoping Study as
a hard copy (free to Britpave members)
This report summarises the findings of a scoping exercise for slab track safety research carried out by Ove Arup & Partners Ltd on behalf of Britpave (the British In-situ Concrete Paving Association). The commission for the scoping exercise was awarded by Britpave in September 2002 to aid the development of a case highlighting slab track safety in order to gain support for the application of slab track on the UK rail network.
The objectives of the ‘Slab Track Safety Scoping Study’ were to:
The study has identified that, although it is generally accepted in the rail industry that slab track provides benefits in terms of safety when compared with traditional ballasted forms, little substantive research or evidence is available to support this.
It is recommended that a risk-based structure be adopted as a framework for the safety case for slab track. The tolerable failure rates for the existing UK track could be developed by, for example, assessing the ultimate consequences of track failure. This would determine the rate at which track failures can be tolerated per km per annum. A similar approach can be taken to accidents occurring during maintenance work.
The developed safety case should be supported by evidence and research into slab track safety. The following areas of further work have been identified by the study:
To further both these arguments, it is recommended that a case study model should be developed, which would use an existing UK line to illustrate the potential safety benefits of a slab track installation. It is suggested that three scenarios could be modelled: