Skip to main content

Modular water treatment solutions

Siltbuster has provided Costain with four modular treatment solutions, to be used during the delivery of the £200 million Preston Western Distributor Road, linking Preston and southern Fylde to the M55 motorway.
May 3, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
A modular system from Siltbuster is being used to protect water courses around the Preston Western Distributor Road project

The 4km dual carriageway is set to open in 2023 and includes a new motorway junction, four new bridges and three underpasses. The route goes past several surface watercourses, including the Savick Brook and the Lancaster Canal. With this in mind, Costain contacted Siltbuster and tasked it with planning the water runoff management.

Siltbuster has deployed four water treatment systems to cover the multiple controlled watercourses where water is being released from the site. Each location is regulated by the Environment Agency, with the Environmental Permit requiring total suspended solids to be less than 100mg/litre and a pH value between pH6 and pH9 to be achieved consistently.

In order to protect the north-west's aquatic ecosystems and habitats, each Siltbuster unit needed to be capable of treating flows of up to 40m3/hr. To deliver this, all of the systems include two-stage flow proportional chemical dosing of coagulant and flocculant to improve the settlement rates of the very fine suspended clay solids, and an 8m3 tank complete with mixers and a HB50 lamella clarifier. The modular nature of these solutions means additional capacity can easily be added should there be greater volumes of water needing to be treated.

Costain said that Siltbuster systems have helped keep the project on track by ensuring the contractor is in line with its environmental permit at all times, protecting the surrounding habitats. Because Siltbuster was consulted from an early stage in the project, the firm was able to advise on temporary flexible modular solutions that could be rapidly deployed from its hire fleet as soon as the need arose. The company has also offered Costain specialist technical advice and training, helping to protect the aquatic ecosystems around the project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Dynapac’s new asphalt compactors
    April 16, 2021
    Dynapac is widening its asphalt compaction range with the addition of new models aimed at the rental market, as well as a new deadweight roller for finishing work
  • Concrete plants: flexibility and efficiency
    March 17, 2016
    Concrete mixing plants are becoming more flexible and innovative to ensure they meet increasingly stringent construction schedules. Increasing demands are put on contractors to cut down the transportation of material to construction sites in the name of efficiency and the environment. For that reason concrete mixing plants are increasingly flexible in their transportation to sites, their set up times and their output. Ammann Elba, the company created when German-based Elba was acquired by Ammann in 20
  • Bridge under discussion for UK's Thames River
    March 22, 2012
    Engineering specialist AECOM will carry out a study into the proposed Lower Thames Crossing project in the UK.
  • UK: Mott MacDonald reports £56 million FARRRS highway is open
    March 21, 2016
    Mott MacDonald Construction reports that the £56 million Finningley and Rossington Regeneration Route Scheme - FARRRS - in Doncaster, UK, has been completed and open. Mott MacDonald provided Doncaster Council with the majority of pre-construction services on the project. Planning for a link connecting the south of Doncaster to Junction 3 of the M18 started over a decade ago. The first phase, known as Great Yorkshire Way, comprises 1.5km of new dual carriageway and 3km of single carriageway. It also includes