Skip to main content

BAM, Morgan Sindall start UK’s €112 million Oldbury viaduct job

A joint venture of BAM, Morgan Sindall and VolkerFitzpatrick has started refurbishing the Oldbury viaduct on the UK’s M5 motorway. The €112 million project will see repairs to a 3.5km stretch between junctions 1 and 2 of the motorway – one of the UK’s busiest routes – to the west of Birmingham city. Work is being done in three phases starting with the removal of the road surface on the southbound carriageway to investigate the condition of the concrete deck.
July 31, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
M5 junctions 1 and 2 in need of repair and waterproofing

A joint venture of 7456 BAM, 2567 Morgan Sindall and 2849 VolkerFitzpatrick has started refurbishing the Oldbury viaduct on the UK’s M5 motorway.

The €112 million project will see repairs to a 3.5km stretch between junctions 1 and 2 of the motorway – one of the UK’s busiest routes – to the west of Birmingham city.

Work is being done in three phases starting with the removal of the road surface on the southbound carriageway to investigate the condition of the concrete deck.

Damaged concrete will be repaired and a new waterproofing layer added prior to resurfacing. The process will then be repeated on the northbound carriageway, said Matt Atkinson, project director for the joint venture.

Various sections of the M5 through the West Midlands are elevated – viaducts – that were made of concrete in the late 1960’s. The Oldbury viaduct carries 120,000 vehicles a day, according to 8100 Highways England, the government agency responsible for major roads in England.

“This scheme is the largest concrete repair project ever undertaken in the UK,” the agency said. “To carry out concrete repair and joint replacement works safely, we will need to scaffold under most of the 2.9km long, 30m wide viaduct. All of our scaffolding will then be encapsulated in polythene to prevent the escape of water, dust and debris.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Shortlist set for Lower Thames tunnel work
    April 9, 2021
    Bam Nuttal, Bouygues, Dragados and Hochtief are in the running for the UK project.
  • Well structured maintenance
    January 4, 2013
    Major bridge maintenance and replacement projects across the world are extending the life of many impressive historic landmarks as Guy Woodford reports The Tamar Bridge, part of the main A38 trunk road linking Saltash in Cornwall with Plymouth in Devon, south west England, marked its 50th anniversary with a steel deck resurfacing project involving Stirling Lloyd's Eliminator bridge deck waterproofing system. Jointly owned by Plymouth City Council and Cornwall Council, the Tamar has a suspended length of 642
  • North East UK’s A19 /A1058 Coast Road triple-deck junction opens
    April 5, 2019
    More than 80,000 drivers a day are now using the recently opened and - first ever - North Tyneside triple-deck highway junction in the northeast. England’s A19 /A1058 Coast Road junction improvement scheme, being done for the client Highways England, was opened on time. However, there will be some overnight closures in the next several weeks to complete the landscaping, traffic light and footpath work. A time capsule has been buried on site and is due to be opened in 2118. Work started in June 2016 on
  • Bridges in Sunderland and Poland are being slid into place
    February 6, 2017
    Sunderland sees a bridge slide into place and two bridges inch their way across a Polish highway Slowly but surely, a 2,500 tonne section of a new bridge deck was eased out from the banks of the River Wear near Sunderland in northern England. It now straddles the water, pointing towards the opposite bank which it will eventually reach after another sliding operation likely to take place next year. The project to build the New Wear Crossing is now halfway through with the first half of the steel deck b