Abstract

Construction activities typically create large amounts of ground disturbance, which can lead to increased rates of soil erosion. Construction stormwater practices are used on active jobsites to protect downstream waterbodies from offsite sediment transport. Federal and state regulations require routine pollution prevention inspections to ensure that temporary stormwater practices are in place and performing as intended. This study addresses the existing challenges and limitations in the construction stormwater inspections and presents a unique approach for performing unmanned aerial system (UAS)-based inspections. Deep learning-based object detection principles were applied to identify and locate practices installed on active construction sites. The system integrates a post-processing stage by clustering results. The developed framework consists of data preparation with aerial inspections, model training, validation of the model, and testing for accuracy. The developed model was created from 800 aerial images and was used to detect four different types of construction stormwater practices at 100% accuracy on the Mean Average Precision (MAP) with minimal false positive detections. Results indicate that object detection could be implemented on UAS-acquired imagery as a novel approach to construction stormwater inspections and provide accurate results for site plan comparisons by rapidly detecting the quantity and location of field-installed stormwater practices.

Highlights

  • Temporary erosion and sediment control (E&SC) practices on construction sites provide protection for the downstream environment by minimizing the impact of sedimentladen stormwater runoff associated with land-disturbing activities

  • The results results of of this this study study showed showed that that aerial inspections implementations on-site, compared to inspectionscan cancapture capturehigh-quality high-qualityimages imagesofof implementations on-site, compared photographs taken during traditional on-foot inspections

  • The comparison between aerial to photographs taken during traditional on-foot inspections

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Summary

Introduction

Temporary erosion and sediment control (E&SC) practices on construction sites provide protection for the downstream environment by minimizing the impact of sedimentladen stormwater runoff associated with land-disturbing activities. Active construction sites are susceptible to increased erosivity due to grading and land-disturbing activities that often expose multiple acres of land. These disturbed areas are a potential risk to release large amounts of sediment into existing water bodies [1]. Anthropogenic-associated sediment discharge creates environmental and ecological risks and results in the destruction of fish habitat, degradation of water quality, and reduces the capacity of streams, harbors, and rivers [3,4].

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