Skip to main content

Mobile grouting trailers for soil nail rigs

Geotechnical specialists, Bachy Soletanche and Carillion Piling are currently working on an £18 million (e21 million) geotechnical contract as part of carriageway improvements on the M1 motorway to the north of London, England. The work between junctions 10-13, Luton to Milton Keynes, is being carried out for the Costain Carillion joint venture working on behalf of the Highways Agency. The piling and soil nailing works are to facilitate the conversion of the current hard shoulder to a peak-time running lane
February 7, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Geotechnical specialists, 1485 Bachy Soletanche and 2354 Carillion Piling are currently working on an £18 million (e21 million) geotechnical contract as part of carriageway improvements on the M1 motorway to the north of London, England.

The work between junctions 10-13, Luton to Milton Keynes, is being carried out for the Costain Carillion joint venture working on behalf of the Highways Agency.

The piling and soil nailing works are to facilitate the conversion of the current hard shoulder to a peak-time running lane with further junction improvements including 60 improved sign gantries and emergency refuges, over the 25km length.

Designed by the 2309 Highways Agency's engineer, Parsons Brinkerhoff, and Costain Carillion's engineer, Scott Wilson, there has been no need for additional land take.

The work is phased between the three junctions on only one carriageway at a time to avoid disruption to the travelling public and to abide by health and safety regulations.

Due to last up to 90 weeks, the project includes 250 Continuous Flight Auger (CFA) gantry piles each 750mm diameter and up to 20m long, with vibrated full-length reinforcement cages, 1600, 750mm diameter CFA piles for the contiguous bored pile walls up to 11m long in the emergency refuges, and 22,000 hollow stem and solid bar soil nails to stabilise the new cuttings and embankments, which are between 5m and 12m long.

The embankments are made up of a variety of fill materials, and the cutting slopes are generally within clay with flints over chalk (these achieve a maximum thickness of 5m and are thought to have originated from prolonged in situ weathering of outcrops of the Woolwich and Reading beds, while the chalk formation occurs as upper chalk, middle chalk, grey chalk and chalk marl along the length of the route).

The piling jv team said of the works: "High levels of safety have been paramount with this project due to working close to live traffic and some overhead power lines. This has led to a number of innovations by the Bachy Soletanche and Carillion Piling jv, including guarded soil nail rigs with a safe operator platform, improved guarding and auger cleaning for CFA piling, rope access systems, mobile grouting trailers, and a new Geoweb securing system. The new developments ensure work can be completed within the specified time frame with minimised safety risks."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tunnel essential to reduce congestion
    February 21, 2012
    Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City's dense population, which was estimated to be 10,680 persons/km2 in 2005, is, over the next ten years, set to benefit from the completion of the Thu Thiem Urban Area project, which will provide homes for up to 200,000 people.
  • BAUER involved in constructing a tunnel under the Suez Canal
    October 4, 2016
    The widened Suez Canal, located at Ismailia in Egypt, is now providing extra capacity for vessels, having been officially opened in August 2015. The waterway has great significance for world trade and has been widened at certain points and also expanded.
  • Australian state's road safety gains
    May 29, 2012
    The authorities in the Australian state of Victoria have carried out projects worth some US$2.75 billion (A$3.1 billion). This includes 1,250 road safety projects in all, such as improvement to an intersection between Airfield Road and Princes Highway East at Traralgon West and upgrades along Bloomfield Road from Nilma to Crossover to prevent run-off-road accidents. Upgrades are also being made to provide run-off-road treatments including guard fences, linemarking, powerpole relocation, shoulder sealing, tr
  • Eradicating work zone danger
    June 26, 2013
    New safety systems for highway work zones are helping to reduce deaths and injuries in the United States, while much work is being done in Europe to improve work zone safety. Guy Woodford reports. With more road building underway than at any one time in Texas history, the US Lone Star state’s Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is introducing its first highway safety system with queue-warning technology and temporary rumble strips to cut work zone collisions. Debuting along a central Texas stretch of the