Showing posts with label ISO55000. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ISO55000. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 June 2025

UK Railway Industry for Dummies focusing on Rail Infrastructure

Rail assets are organised into large hierarchical asset classes that are interdependent to make up a rail system. These rail assets are organised using detailed, lower-level assets built from taxonomies and ontologies tailored to each jurisdiction within the rail industry.  Railway interaction and operation of assets must conform to various stringent rail regulations.  Safety has a massive focus.

Taxonomy organises data hierarchically, while ontology models both hierarchies and complex relationships between entities and their properties. In the rail industry, ontologies are crucial for successfully modelling assets.

The picture shows significant assets (high-level)

Main Railway Infrastructure Assets high-level overview.

The railways consist of "rolling stock, rail infrastructure, and environment"; these have multiple relationships between component assets.
1. Rolling stock is the trains.
2. Rail Infrastructure relates to: 
    2.1. Electrification/power, generally used for power supply for signalling, train power, and telecoms.
    2.2. Telecommunication, track to centre, train to centre used to communicate, and include sensors and IoT devices.
    2.3. Signalling relates to ensuring train safety so the train knows there is a train ahead of it, and issues when to slow down.
    2.4. Track Engineering, also known as Rail Engineering and The Permanent Way, involves the rails, connectivity, support, extensive physics and geometry, steel rail installation and joining, ballast (the ground track is laid on), drainage, and sleepers. It gets detailed with rail joins (Fishplated) and even the welding process used.  Fastening types, baseplates, sleepers, off-track maintenance such as hedge trimming (you won't believe the rules unless you work in the rail industry) ...
3. The environment refers to the existing conditions before the railway, including the topography and type of terrain, bridges, and rivers.

The interdependencies with the rail industry are perfect for numerous AI scenarios.  With all AI, you need high-quality data, and it must be secured appropriately.  Bring the information from the various business functions, allowing for automation, ML, AI and better decision making.

Each country or jurisdiction has different rules for trains, and operators must comply with Health, Safety, and Environment (HSE) regulations.  There are industry rules adapted to each jurisdiction and standards that vary between regions.  For example, most jurisdictions have a gauge width requirement; in the UK, the standard gauge is 4 feet 8 1/2 inches (1435mm).  There are exceptions, such as heritage railways in the UK.  There are manufacturing standards for everything.  EN13674 is the British Rail specification for the actual pure steel used to manufacture the track to be installed.


References used: 

Permanent Way Institution (2023) Understanding Track Engineering. London: The PWI. Available at: https://www.thepwi.org/product/understanding-track-engineering/ (Accessed: 4 July 2025)

Camarazo, D., Roxin, A. and Lalou, M. (2024) Railway systems’ ontologies: A literature review and an alignment proposal. 26th International Conference on Information Integration and Web Intelligence (iiWAS2024), Bratislava, Slovakia, December 2024. Available at: https://ube.hal.science/hal-04797679/document (Accessed: 4 July 2025).

Network Rail (2021) Asset Management: Weather Resilience and Climate Change Adaptation Plan. London: Network Rail. Available at: https://www.networkrail.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Asset-Management-WRCCA-Plan.pdf (Accessed: 4 July 2025).