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

  • Boom in Asian infrastructure investment
    February 8, 2012
    Investment in China and India continues unabated, but other nations on the continent are eager to attract companies as Patrick Smith reports Asia is still booming despite the current economic crisis, and new infrastructure programmes are constantly coming on stream. Powerhouses China and India, with their double-digit growth figures and huge infrastructure plans (in scope and cost), are leading the way and are still magnets for businesses wishing to expand, both in terms of facilities and customers. But oth
  • Davao City tunnel work accelerated
    November 18, 2022
    The twin-tube 2.3km-long tunnel will be the longest in the Philippines and is being constructed by Filipino and Japanese engineers.
  • India plans major infrastucture investment
    February 10, 2012
    India says it turned its Commonwealth Games into a world-class success, and now it aims to do the same with its infrastructure. Patrick Smith reports. On October, 2010 India put itself on the world stage, and disaster appeared to loom as a catalogue of problems dogged its biggest ever sporting event. Costing nearly US$2 billion to stage, the most expensive Commonwealth Games ever were, according to some, in doubt.
  • India plans major infrastucture investment
    April 5, 2012
    India says it turned its Commonwealth Games into a world-class success, and now it aims to do the same with its infrastructure. Patrick Smith reports On October, 2010 India put itself on the world stage, and disaster appeared to loom as a catalogue of problems dogged its biggest ever sporting event. Costing nearly US$2 billion to stage, the most expensive Commonwealth Games ever were, according to some, in doubt. After years of planning some projects were incomplete, there were health scares and a br