Road Safety Action International (RSAI)'s Technical and Road Safety Audit Programme is a systematic, independent, and evidence-based examination of road projects across the entire project life cycle — from design and procurement to construction, operation, and handover. We verify whether road infrastructure complies with design standards, material specifications, safety requirements, environmental safeguards, and contractual obligations, while identifying risks that may lead to crashes, structural failure, cost overruns, or reduced durability.

Across Liberia, Sierra Leone, and The Gambia, our programme delivers a comprehensive audit framework that integrates technical due diligence, road safety audits, quality assurance, risk identification, and corrective action planning — ensuring that roads are safe, resilient, cost-effective, and fit for purpose.

Technical Road Audit
Road Safety Audit
Construction Quality Assurance

Why Technical and Road Safety Audit Matters

Road infrastructure projects represent significant financial, technical, and social investments. Yet many road projects suffer from design deficiencies, construction non-compliance, safety hazards, premature failure, and poor long-term performance due to weak technical oversight and limited safety auditing.

Common failure points include:

  • Inadequate design verification and standard compliance
  • Poor geometric design — horizontal curves, alignment, camber, and sight distance
  • Substandard materials — aggregate quality, asphalt mix design, and low bearing capacity soils
  • Weak construction methodology and quality control
  • Non-compliance with BOQs, drawings, and specifications
  • Unsafe work zones and poor worker visibility
  • Insufficient pedestrian, cyclist, school zone, and community safety measures
  • Weak drainage, erosion control, and flood management
  • Limited documentation, record keeping, and audit trails
  • Inadequate final inspection and certification

These gaps result in crash risks, premature pavement failure, cost inefficiencies, accountability failures, and loss of public trust.

Our programme directly addresses each of these gaps.

Our Strategic Objectives

The Technical and Road Safety Audit Programme aims to:

  • Verify compliance with design standards, specifications, and regulations
  • Assess geometric design, pavement structure, drainage, and alignment
  • Identify technical defects, safety risks, and non-compliance issues
  • Strengthen quality assurance and quality control mechanisms
  • Improve work-zone, pedestrian, cyclist, and community safety
  • Ensure compliance with environmental, social, and health & safety plans
  • Validate cost estimates, BOQs, procurement, and contractor submissions
  • Support timely completion, accountability, and long-term performance

Audit Scope Across the Project Life Cycle

The programme adopts a life-cycle-based, risk-driven, and evidence-led audit methodology, integrating technical audits and road safety audits across three critical stages.

Stage 1: Design Audit
  • Design verification and benchmarking: alignment verification and geometric design review against applicable standards
  • Cross-section and width assessment: lane width, shoulder width, median width, and road camber analysis
  • Horizontal curve and sight distance analysis: road geometry review for safe speed and visibility
  • Drainage, culverts, and retaining structures: embankment design and flood management provisions
  • Pavement design and load factor evaluation: durability assessment and structural adequacy verification
  • Cost estimate and BOQ validation: cost-effectiveness review and procurement plan assessment
  • Health & safety plan and social impact plan review: compliance with environmental and community safeguards
Stage 2: Construction Audit
  • Construction methodology review: verification of approved methods, equipment adequacy, and work scheduling
  • Sub-grade and soil testing: compaction testing, density verification, and bearing capacity assessment
  • Material quality: aggregate quality, asphalt mix design, and pavement deflection monitoring
  • Crack detection and surface assessment: early identification of structural failure risks
  • Work-zone safety: signage, barriers, night-time safety provisions, and worker visibility standards
  • Environmental controls: erosion, dust, noise, waste management, and air pollution mitigation
  • Community protection: consultation records, relocation plans, cultural site protection, and compensation verification
Stage 3: Operation and Pre-Handover Audit
  • Intersection and roundabout safety assessment: traffic flow tests, traffic counts, and road geometry review
  • Pedestrian and bicycle safety features: school zone markings, safety zones, and accessible infrastructure
  • Barrier installation and skid resistance testing: verification of road surface performance under traffic conditions
  • GPS survey and digital documentation: photographic and video inspection, digital record keeping, and audit trail
  • Final inspection and certification: certification of completion, handover documentation, and quality assurance reporting

Methods and Tools

RSAI's audit teams deploy an integrated suite of field and technical tools:

Field Inspections Structured site visits and field inspections at all project stages.
Laboratory Testing Material verification, soil and compaction testing, and aggregate quality analysis.
GPS Surveys & Traffic Counts Spatial documentation and post-construction traffic flow evaluation.
Video & Photographic Documentation Visual inspection records and digital audit trails for accountability.
Road Vibration & Skid Resistance Analysis Surface performance testing under real traffic conditions.
Digital Record Keeping & Risk Reporting Audit tracking systems and non-compliance reporting frameworks.

Deliverables

Each audit engagement produces the following outputs:

Technical and Road Safety Audit Reports Comprehensive findings against design and construction standards.
Non-Compliance and Risk Registers Itemised records of deficiencies with severity classifications.
Corrective Action and Recommendation Plans Prioritised remediation steps for contractors and authorities.
Quality Assurance and Compliance Documentation Audit trail records for institutional accountability.
Stakeholder Feedback and Validation Reports Summaries from consultation and review workshops.

Implementation Timeline

Phase Stage Key Activities
Phase 1 Inception Document review, audit framework setup, stakeholder engagement
Phase 2 Design-Stage Audit Geometric design, drainage, pavement, cost estimate validation
Phase 3 Construction-Stage Audits Materials testing, compaction, work-zone safety, environmental controls
Phase 4 Pre-Handover and Operational Audit Intersection safety, skid resistance, GPS survey, final inspections
Phase 5 Final Report and Certification Audit report, non-compliance register, corrective action plan, handover certification

Project Organisation and Staffing

Implementing Organisation: Road Safety Action International (RSAI)

Key Stakeholders
  • Ministry of Public Works
  • Ministry of Transport
  • Road authorities and project implementation units
  • Contractors and supervising consultants
  • Local authorities and communities
Technical Team
  • Road safety audit specialists
  • Highway and pavement engineers
  • Materials and geotechnical engineers
  • Environmental and social safeguard experts
  • M&E and documentation specialists

Project Logframe

Outputs
  • Technical and road safety audit reports
  • Non-compliance and risk registers
  • Corrective action and recommendation plans
  • Quality assurance and compliance documentation
Outcomes
  • Improved compliance with design and safety standards
  • Reduced construction and operational risks
  • Enhanced work-zone and road user safety
  • Stronger accountability and project governance
Impact
  • Safer, more durable, and cost-effective road infrastructure
  • Reduced road crashes, injuries, and fatalities
  • Improved public confidence in road investments
  • Long-term performance and sustainability of road assets

Alignment with Global Commitments

Our work directly contributes to:

  • SDG Target 3.6 — Halve road traffic deaths and injuries by 2030
  • The UN Decade of Action for Road Safety (2021–2030)
  • Strengthening national road infrastructure management and oversight systems
  • Supporting World Bank, AfDB, and MDB infrastructure quality standards
  • Building institutional capacity for long-term road asset management

Our Commitment

The Technical and Road Safety Audit Programme provides a critical safeguard for road infrastructure quality and safety. By integrating rigorous technical due diligence with systematic road safety audits, RSAI ensures that roads are designed correctly, built safely, and perform reliably over their intended lifespan.

At RSAI, we believe that:

Every audit completed is a hazard potentially eliminated.

Every non-compliance corrected is a crash potentially prevented.

Every institution strengthened is a road network transformed.


Technical audit is not a formality.
It is a sustained commitment to safer, more accountable, and more durable road infrastructure for every road user.

Partner With Us

We welcome partnerships with:

Government Ministries & Road Agencies Development Partners & International Financiers Construction Contractors & Engineering Consultants Universities & Research Institutions Civil Society & Community Advocacy Groups

Together, we can ensure that every road built in West Africa is not only completed — but completed correctly, safely, and built to last.