Kiwi software helps NZTA
Kiwi software helps NZTA manage Pūhoi to Warkworth
project
New Zealand software innovator CS-VUE has
enhanced an environmental compliance management system for
one of the country’s largest infrastructure projects –
the NZ Transport Agency’s $709.5m motorway from Pūhoi to
Warkworth. It is the first stage of the Ara Tūhono –
Pūhoi to Wellsford Road of National Significance.
It’s
a long way from where it all began. In 2004 the software
start-up business was created to help the former Auckland
City Council better manage its stormwater
consents.
CS-VUE has since grown in staff, clients and
turnover. In recent years, work includes providing software
to manage the New Zealand Transport Agency’s operational
network and capital project consents. Roads of National
Significance projects can involve hundreds of consents
across multiple teams and construction areas, with work
often staged.
The Transport Agency says prior to using
CS-VUE’s software to help manage their consent conditions
and compliance, they relied on a range of spreadsheet-type
systems that differed from contract to contract.
When the
Transport Agency’s second Public Private Partnership (PPP)
Pūhoi to Warkworth was in the procurement phase, CS-VUE
General Manager Wayne Fisher got a phone call.
“I
recall they wanted us to design some enhancements to the
software and quickly,” he laughs. “We were thrilled for
the call up. It was scoped, designed and built in time for
the award of the contract to Northern Express Group
(NX2).”
Mr Fisher says with construction underway,
their software module is now doing its job and will continue
to well after the four-lane motorway opens because many of
the consents are ongoing, as is monitoring and
compliance.
Known as their ‘Two Step Sign Off’
module, CS-VUE has built in extra capability and better data
exchange to effectively allow “two-way conversations”
between the consent holder and its contractors and the
regulator, Auckland Council.
“Normally a consent holder
would rely solely on its contractors to ensure every consent
was being monitored and complied with. Our module gives the
Transport Agency direct oversight and Auckland Council
instant access to the status of consents with the ability to
directly sign them off.”
Graham Jones, Senior
Monitoring Officer at Auckland Council’s Resource Consents
department says: “To the best of my knowledge this is the
first time the regulator has shared a common platform with
both the consent holder, the NZ Transport Agency and the
contractor, NX2. All parties having access to common
software allows us all to be on the same page at any instant
in time on the status of conditions. As a project team, it
allows us to work in a more collaborative manner.”
Tom
Newson, NZTA’s Principal Project Manager, says: “As a
PPP, the Pūhoi to Warkworth conditions require input and
oversight from the three key parties during construction and
once in service to ensure compliance and management of the
outcomes-based consents set by the Board of Inquiry in 2014.
CS-VUE’s new system provides all parties with quick access
and a single source of truth via a two-step validation
process with Auckland Council. We’re using it as a pilot
with a view to using the same CS-VUE application on other
large roading infrastructure projects, such as East West
Link and the Northern Corridor improvements.”
Mr Fisher
says with the 18.5km motorway scheduled to open by 2022,
having a cloud-based environmental compliance management
system that each party can access 24/7 not only means
greater transparency, which helps to avoid any breaches and
saves time.”
CS-VUE is proud of its role with the
Pūhoi to Warkworth PPP, which will ultimately help in the
Northern Express Group’s construction, management and
maintenance of the motorway for the five-year construction
and its further 25-year operational period.
“The
Transport Agency is a massive government agency with a huge
work programme. They’re also champions of innovation. As a
New Zealand-owned and operated software business, we’re
delighted to be working alongside them on a daily basis. It
just goes to show there is room for local products and
suppliers if they can deliver and keep up.”
Mr Newson
says the Pūhoi to Warkworth outcome-based RMA conditions
provide greater flexibility to the contractor in both design
and construction than most other Transport Agency projects.
It also requires vigilance from a compliance
standpoint.
CS-VUE is also working with about 20 percent
of the country’s district and city councils ensuring they
keep on top of their often complex and lengthy consents
granted by regional councils. For Auckland Council, CS-VUE
manages its stormwater and contaminated land
sites.
“Our clients have achieved great results around
improving information accuracy and auditability. We provide
tools to achieve better business analytics and we can reduce
an organisation’s annual operating costs.
Board
directors prick up their ears when we talk about
improvements to governance, risk and compliance. While
helping to keep the rates down seems to resonate with
council procurement managers. Our products actually offer
many tangible advantages.”
He says public and private
entities also respond positively to the concept of
resilience and keeping critical information safe from the
likes of earthquakes, floods or fires. CS-VUE achieves this
as its software is entirely cloud-based, putting everything
in one place for easy management, and no capital expenditure
on hardware is required.
CS-VUE also manages and tracks
resource consents for big infrastructure players and heavy
industry. Most consents being managed are around air
discharge, water, land use, and trade waste, or consents
issued by NZ Petroleum & Minerals for extraction. Sectors
include oil and gas, quarrying, mining, and some of the
country’s key ports. While clients include GBC Winstone,
Bathurst Resources, Fulton Hogan, Landcorp, NZ Defence
Force, KiwiRail, BP and Shell. Large packaging company,
PACT, is among its Australian clients.
And it’s not
just about delivering up-to-the-minute environmental balance
sheets. Since the Health and Safety At Work Act came into
force in April last year, CS-VUE has designed and
implemented software to help businesses and organisations
better manage and mitigate risks in the
workplace.
“Over the past 13 years in software we’ve
learnt you can have all the marketing, management and techno
speak you want, but what really defines whether you succeed
or not is the quality of your software developers and CS-VUE
has an exceptional team.
“We work really hard to keep
ahead of change and continuously improve. That is how
we’ve secured great clients and big projects,” says
Wayne Fisher.
For further information please visit
www.csvue.com