Skip to main content

Kier picks up London tunnel deal

The eight-year maintenance contract includes the Blackwall and Rotherhithe tunnels.
By David Arminas February 1, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
The 1.3km Blackwall Tunnel was originally opened as a single bore in 1897 (photo © Burnstuff2003/Dreamstime)

Kier Highways has won a contract to maintain and manage London’s 10 road tunnels and associated 106 road pumping stations.

The contract with Transport for London (TfL) is worth around €226 million (£200million/US$275 million) over eight years and starts in April, with the option to extend by a further four years.

It includes mechanical, electrical and control activities associated with each tunnel, renewals, safety inspections, intelligent transport systems and cleaning.

The tunnels under the new contract include Blackwall, Rotherhithe, Green Man, George Green, Eastway, Upper Thames Street, Eltham, Fore Street and Hangar Lane.

This will make management of all of TfL's tunnels in London more efficient and make it quicker and easier for TfL to introduce new technology and best practice into the area, said Joe Incutti, group managing director at Kier Highways.

The 1.5km single bore Rotherhithe tunnel was opened in 1908. It carries  a two-lane carriageway 15m below the high-water level of the Thames, with a maximum depth of 23m below the surface.

The 1.3km Blackwall Tunnel was originally opened was a single bore in 1897. By the 1930s, capacity was becoming inadequate and a second bore as opened in 1967.

Kier is already working with TfL to maintain the capital city agency’s main roads with carry around 30 per cent of city traffic. Kier Highways said that the company now maintains 15 tunnels across the UK with a combined bore length of more than 10km.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Stonehenge Tunnel controversy continues
    July 1, 2021
    The controversy continues over the UK’s proposed Stonehenge Bypass Tunnel.
  • Beatty awarded H Agency Hull A63 Improvement Scheme
    August 8, 2014
    Balfour Beatty’s UK construction business has been awarded the €94.45 million (£75 million) A63 Castle Street improvement scheme in Hull for the Highways Agency under an Early Contractor Involvement (ECI) design and build contract. The 1.5km scheme in the centre of the city in East Yorkshire, northern England will improve journey times for road users through conversion of a major interchange into a split level junction with a two-lane dual carriageway carrying east-west traffic below north-south traffic in
  • Stuttgart’s Rosenstein Tunnel to open in March
    March 1, 2022
    Cost of the project, part of a larger interchange plan for the German city, is around €416 million.
  • Volvo machines help construct new Norwegian tunnels
    January 12, 2015
    Close to Larvik in Norway’s Vestfold County and around 80km south of Drammen, two tunnels are currently under construction as part of a state-funded infrastructure development programme. The project, which began earlier this year, comprises 7km of four lane highway – part of the E18 major route – linking the towns of Bommestad and Sky. This includes the new Larvik and Matineå tunnels, which will span 2.8 and 1.3km respectively. Worth €187 million, this project was awarded to Skanska Norway, the second la