Skip to main content

Key UK bridge project for A38

A key UK bridge project for the A38 over the HS2 route.
By MJ Woof October 29, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Xxx A new bridge is being built for the A38 route in the UK due to the H2S rail project


Construction is underway for a new bridge that for the A38 route due to the new HS2 rail link in the UK. The work is being carried out by the Balfour Beatty VINCI joint venture. The partners have begun foundation work for the new bridge that will take HS2 trains under a major A road on the outskirts of Lichfield, Staffordshire.

An expert team of engineers has started work directly underneath the A38 carriageway at Streethay to create the foundations of the Rykneld Street bridge, which are from 20-27m-deep. The complex process involves sinking a total of 88 piles nd to support the weight of the structure.
In preparation for the start of piling Balfour Beatty VINCI and National Highways have successfully built a temporary 320m stretch of the A38, which is now in operation. Once piling has been completed and the bridge deck is installed in late 2025, the realigned section of the road will be moved back to its original position where piling is now taking place – allowing space for the high-speed railway to pass underneath.

At 90.5m in length, HS2’s Rykneld Street bridge is the last of three retaining structures to be built at Streethay and contained within a 455m-long cutting through the ground. The trio of bridges, which also includes the A38 Southbound Slip Overbridge and the Streethay Overbridge, will enable the HS2 line to pass under the A38, its slip lanes and the existing South Staffordshire freight railway.
Around 750,000m3 of earth will be excavated during the process of building the three bridges and reused to form embankments along the HS2 route locally. Zachary Walker, Project Manager for Balfour Beatty VINCI, said: “We’re delivering a series of complex structures that will allow HS2 to pass underneath the A38, its slip lanes and the South Staffordshire freight railway near Lichfield. This exciting engineering project is about to move onto the next phase, as we begin the foundation work on the third and final bridge we’re building along this 455m retained cutting in Streethay.”
David Perry, Senior Project Manager for HS2, said: “Carrying out a complex engineering operation of this scale in close proximity to a live carriageway comes with a unique set of challenges, requiring a multi-stage and collaborative approach from everyone involved. 

A series of phased traffic management measures will continue during the build process and road realignment phase, with HS2 and National Highways working together to keep traffic flowing and to minimise disruption for road users.



 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Innovative, flexible bridge formwork systems
    February 14, 2012
    Innovative formwork systems have been used to construct a variety of bridge structures. Patrick Smith reports. As part of the work on Germany's new A4 autobahn near Eisenach, the contracting joint venture awarded the formwork contract for two of the three viaducts to Doka. What makes this assignment so special to the company is that although the two steel composite bridges each have very different cross-sections, the JV is using the same overslung composite forming carriage to pour the carriageway slabs of
  • TensarTech supports Polish contract
    November 12, 2012
    TensarTech soil retaining walls have been used during the construction of a section of the A1 motorway in Poland. Extensive underground mining in the south of the country posed a significant challenge to building the 16km Piekary Slaskie to Pyrzowice (Katowice Airport) stretch of the motorway which, on completion, will run more than 240km from Gdansk in northern Poland to Gorzyczki on the Polish-Czech Republic border. To accommodate potential differences in settlement on embankments approaching a series of
  • US$73 million Francis Scott Bridge replacement contract
    September 3, 2024
    Kiewit has been awarded a US$73 million Francis Scott Bridge replacement contract.
  • Machine control technology shortens road contract
    May 28, 2013
    The use of sophisticated machine control technology has helped halve the schedule required for a road contract – Jeff Winke. By using the latest machine control systems on the equipment fleet, a US contractor has managed to halve worker hours, machine time and overall costs. “We chopped 50% off the contract schedule,” said Jim Swenson, licensed professional land surveyor for Oregon Mainline Paving based in McMinnville, Oregon. “The project was completed a year ahead of the two-year schedule,” he explained