• Thu. Apr 25th, 2024

Staff at the WIT Arena at the Sports campus of Waterford Institute of Technology have used a robot to mark the seven playing pitches for the upcoming Renault GAA World Games 2019. It’s the first time ever that playing pitches in Ireland have been marked using a robot.

The celebration of Gaelic Games will feature as many as 97 international teams and a total of 1,300 players.

The Intelligent Marking robot saved WIT Arena staff from taking on the job of lining pitches of different layout, size and markings to the standard Gaelic Games spec. Intelligent Marking Ireland’s Mícheál Nolan is a sports fanatic and brought the company’s Chief Technology Officer, Stefan Thilemann, from Denmark this week to oversee the line-marking of the WIT Arena pitches. “It typically takes two people between three and five hours to initially mark a GAA pitch. Our technology did it in less than an hour.”

The pitches for the World Games are only 100 metres long, as opposed to the normal 140 to 150 metres GAA spec. There are no 45m or 65m lines and the centre line required for the World Games is the full pitch width. There’s also a dotted line across the D marking for World Games matches. Lining seven pitches from scratch, some of them on synthetic turf, and getting all of the markings and specs perfect would have taken the WIT Arena team approximately a week. It would have been a nightmare and would have held up the entire grounds staff.

“Setting the system up and inserting the required programme onto the tablet and lining the entire WIT Arena campus took only a few hours. We walked away for the rest of the day and let the robot do its job. We custom-built the layouts very quickly for this landmark event. Lining pitches with a robot is a first for Waterford and a first for the GAA and we are privileged to be supporting the preparations for such a fantastic event,” Nolan said.

WIT Arena’s David Grant said: “It is an honour and a privilege for us to host the World Games. We’ve put months of work into ensuring every playing surface, every blade of grass is just right. It would have taken our team up to a week to mark the pitches. The Intelligent Marking Ireland system had everything done in a day. The lines and the various markings aren’t just right. They are absolutely spot on. There are big plans for the WIT Arena and we’re planning on investing in our own Intelligent Marking robot so we can focus our attention on other work while it marks the required lines on the various playing surfaces for us into the future.”

Headquartered in Denmark, Intelligent Marking is the developer of the world’s premier autonomous line marking robot, which lines pitches using a pre-programmed robot, GPS sub-station and a tablet device.

The Intelligent One model used in Waterford uses a patented technology that allows the robot to line any pitch with sub-centimetre accuracy. The autonomous system frees ground staff to do other work and can operate in all weather conditions including in the dark.
The system can quickly and effortlessly go from one pitch layout to another at the push of a button. It also makes last-minute adjustments to the layout possible so grounds managers can shift the pitch in any direction to avoid heavy wear and tear to keep the grass surface in pristine condition.

Intelligent Marking’s Stefan Thilemann said the system is being used by sports grounds across the globe. “It’s pre-programmed for at least 50 different field layouts but we’re increasing this offering all the time. It’s simple to use while allowing users to customise the layout exactly according to their needs. It weighs just 60kg, takes up no more space than a typical push mower and is easy transportable in a normal van or estate car. It can even be driven up ramps for easier transport. Being a company that has always focused on making line marking a more manageable and enjoyable task by employing state-of-the-art technologies it is very rewarding getting feedback on the system as customers acknowledge the burden the system is taking away from them making them much more effective.”

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