Live pavement capture · Akron, OH

Akron's streets, already scored.

We ran survey-grade LiDAR and 360° cameras across downtown Akron, then let our AI score every segment automatically — Good pavement to Failed. This is a live look at what CYVL already sees on the ground: no login, nothing to install.

Click any street segment on the map to see its street name, condition, and PCI score.

Live capture · Downtown Akron

Downtown Akron, OH1,007 segments scored

Loading captured network…

Pavement condition

This is real Akron data, not a stock demo.

Every line below is an actual Akron pavement segment we captured and scored automatically — click any street to see its name, condition grade, and PCI. Picture the same objective score on every mile your agency manages, refreshed continuously instead of surveyed years apart.

1,007
Segments scored
494
Rated Poor or worse
57.6
Avg condition (PCI)

Built for how Akron manages its right-of-way

You can't fix what you can't measure. We measure all of it.

Fix the worst first

Every paving dollar has to defend itself — which streets get rebuilt, which get preserved, and why.

CYVL scores the true condition of every street continuously, so your team can rank exactly what to rehabilitate first — objective ground truth, not a windshield survey.

Defensible capital plans

Councils and residents want to see what each paving and reconstruction dollar actually buys.

CYVL turns condition data into ranked, defensible capital plans, so budget decisions rest on comparable numbers instead of anecdotes.

ADA & safety

Sidewalks, ramps, signs, signals, and markings all have to be inventoried and kept to standard.

Every above-ground asset in the right-of-way is captured and geolocated automatically — the asset base your ADA and safety projects are designed from.

Equity

Investment should reach every neighborhood to the same standard, not just the ones that call in the most.

CYVL surveys every street to one consistent standard, so equity decisions rest on objective, comparable condition data.

Cities like yours

In Buffalo, CYVL gave Mayor Sean Ryan's “Pave It!” team ground truth on every street — turning a campaign promise into a data-backed paving plan across the whole city.

Read the Buffalo case study

Akron road conditions

Akron's roads, explained.

Plain-language answers about Akron's road conditions, worst streets, and how a modern, data-driven paving plan gets built.

Q.01

How bad are the roads in Akron?

CYVL captured and automatically scored 1,007 pavement segments across a sample of downtown Akron using survey-grade LiDAR and 360° imagery. The average condition came in at 57.6 on the 0–100 Pavement Condition Index (PCI), and 494 segments rated Poor or worse. You can explore every scored street on the live Akron pavement map above — this is a downtown sample, not the full city network.

Q.02

Which streets in Akron are in the worst condition?

CYVL scores every road segment individually instead of averaging a whole corridor, so the worst streets stand out immediately. On the live Akron map above, segments shaded orange to dark red are rated Poor, Very Poor, Serious, or Failed — click any segment to see its street name and exact PCI score. A full network scan would surface every deficient block the same way.

Q.03

How does Akron build a data-driven paving plan?

A defensible paving plan starts with objective, network-wide condition data. CYVL scores the true condition of every street continuously — validated against the ASTM D6433 PCI standard — then turns those scores into ranked, multi-year capital plans. That lets Akron fix the worst first, preserve good pavement before it fails, and show councils and residents exactly what each paving dollar buys.

Q.04

How does Akron assess road conditions without manual surveys?

Instead of sending a crew to walk or windshield-survey every street, a city mounts CYVL's sensor rig on an existing fleet vehicle and drives normal routes. The rig captures LiDAR and 360° imagery; CYVL's AI then builds a digital twin and auto-generates PCI scores plus a full right-of-way asset inventory — so the entire Akron network can be assessed in days and refreshed continuously instead of every few years.