Skip to main content

Kier rebuilds storm-damaged road in England’s tourist Cumbria region

The first of 20 steel posts have been positioned for major road repairs to the A591 road in northern England under a £40 million project to repair December storm damage. The A591 is a major local authority road in Cumbria. It links the M6 motorway near Brettargh Holt with important Lake District tourist destinations such as Kendal, Windermere, Ambleside, Grasmere and Keswick.
May 10, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Improvements are being made to the A591 in Cumbria

The first of 20 steel posts have been positioned for major road repairs to the A591 road in northern England under a £40 million project to repair December storm damage.

The A591 is a major local authority road in Cumbria. It links the M6 motorway near Brettargh Holt with important Lake District tourist destinations such as Kendal, Windermere, Ambleside, Grasmere and Keswick.

The restoration project is being led by 8100 Highways England, the wholly government-owned road infrastructure agency, on behalf of Cumbria County Council and the road is schedule to be reopened by the end of May.

Last month, Kier Highways was appointed as main contractor for the re-build work on the A591 at Dunmail Raise, which was washed away. Posts are being fastened to the bedrock at the site and will be used to build a retaining wall in the beck at the side of the collapsed part of the A591.
 
Chris Holehouse, Highways England’s senior project manager for the scheme, said that the retaining wall is already starting to take shape. It wall will provide greater protection to the road from the effects of erosion.

The wall will be built using 4.5m-wide concrete panels which will be supported by the steel posts. More concrete will be poured behind the panels up to a thickness of 3.5m. The wall will also be covered with local stone so that it looks like a dry stone wall and blends in with the local landscape.
 
So far, Kier has removed all the loose rocks and stones from the edge of the beck, created strong foundations for the concrete wall panels and installed some of the steel supporting posts.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK tourist A591 road in Cumbria gets repaired after storm damage
    June 17, 2016
    The UK’s A591 road in Cumbria was badly damaged in last December’s storms but recent work on a retaining wall is making life easier for construction crews. The vital Lake District tourist route, which stretches between Grasmere and Keswick, has been closed between St Johns in the Vale and Dunmail Raise following storms Desmond and Eva. A new 106m retaining wall - the length of a football pitch - is being built in the beck alongside the part of the A591 which collapsed during the bad weather. Contractors
  • Highways England awards northern deals to Kier, CH2M and Costain
    December 15, 2016
    The UK’s Highways England has awarded four new-style road contracts worth over €360 million for road works in northern England. Two 15-year maintenance and response contracts expected to be worth up to €314 million have been awarded, one to Kier Highways and the other to a joint venture of CH2M and Costain. The Asset Delivery contracts, which will start on 1 April, will see Kier Highways operating in the rugged county of Cumbria. The CH2M-Costain JV operating in the North East will deliver routine h
  • The A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme takes shape
    May 31, 2017
    Highways England’s project manager gives sneak peek into progress on the UK’s biggest road upgrade now under construction. Road construction workers often find interesting buried items when building roads and the UK’s A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme is proving the point. It’s been less than half a year since construction started on the €1.76 billion A14 scheme, Highways England’s largest ongoing project. Highways England is the wholly government-owned company responsible for modernising, main
  • SWARCO prism signs for Highways England
    September 8, 2020
    The deal is part of a phased scheme of a diversion routes over the next few years.