Post Tagged with: "Hydraulic Modeling"

Houston selects LAN for water system model

Houston selects LAN for water system model

January 23, 2017 at 10:02 am 0 comments

The City of Houston has selected planning, engineering and program management firm Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam, Inc. (LAN) to develop an all-pipes hydraulic model of its water system. As a regional water provider, the city delivers surface water through a complex and dynamic transmission and distributionRead More

IDModeling Releases Sedaru Smart Ops

IDModeling Releases Sedaru Smart Ops

November 14, 2016 at 8:45 am 0 comments

IDModeling, Inc. has announced the deployment of Sedaru Smart Ops for real-time alerting, analysis and prediction of water system performance. This technology will enable engineers and operators to reduce water loss, energy costs and cost of operations. Sedaru, a smart water operating software, serves asRead More

Bentley: Reality Modeling for Infrastructure Going Mainstream

Bentley: Reality Modeling for Infrastructure Going Mainstream

November 7, 2016 at 2:35 pm 0 comments

At Bentley System’s Year in Infrastructure 2016 Conference last week in London, Bentley CEO Greg Bentley made the case in his keynote that since his company’s acquisition and assimilation of ContextCapture software in 2015, the proliferation of reality modeling across users’ projects — and across Bentley’s software portfolio —Read More

Innovyze’s Boulos Honored with ASCE Award

Innovyze’s Boulos Honored with ASCE Award

June 19, 2016 at 5:06 pm 0 comments

Innovyze recently announced that its president, COO and chief innovation officer, Dr. Paul F. Boulos, has been selected by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) to receive the 2016 Parcel-Sverdrup Civil Engineering Management Award. The award ceremony will be held during the Society’s AnnualRead More

Maximizing Data

Maximizing Data

March 2, 2016 at 12:00 am 0 comments

According to the U.S. EPA, there are approximately 155,000 public drinking water systems (publicly or privately-owned) and more than 16,000 public wastewater systems in the United States. Today, these water and wastewater utilities are using technology such as geographic information systems (GIS), monitoring systems and models more than ever before to manage their systems and enhance decision making.