Skip to main content

UV lining is highway drainage first for UK motorway upgrade

Drainage specialist Lanes Group is implementing the first project to extensively line highway drainage pipes as part of a Smart Motorway initiative in the UK. Lanes has been commissioned by the Carillion Kier Joint Venture working for Highways England to install ultra-violet – UV - liners during the M6 Junction 16-19 Smart Motorway scheme between Crewe and Knutsford, in county Cheshire. Lanes said that it is the first time that roadside drainage pipes will have been extensively lined, instead of being
December 19, 2017 Read time: 3 mins

Drainage specialist 7891 Lanes Group is implementing the first project to extensively line highway drainage pipes as part of a Smart Motorway initiative in the UK

Lanes has been commissioned by the Carillion Kier Joint Venture working for Highways England to install ultra-violet – UV - liners during the M6 Junction 16-19 Smart Motorway scheme between Crewe and Knutsford, in county Cheshire.

Lanes said that it is the first time that roadside drainage pipes will have been extensively lined, instead of being replaced, during a motorway upgrade project in the UK. Liners are designed to give the pipes additional structural strength to meet the 50-year asset lifespan specified by Highways England.

UV cure in-place pipe lining (CIPP) is ideally suited to working in highway environments, said Lanes. Compared with the only other viable system, hot water CIPP lining, it is faster, needs less equipment and fewer personnel. It can also be carried out in a more confined space and generates no toxic water waste.

The Smart Motorway upgrade is tackling congestion and improving journey times by converting the hard shoulder to a permanent extra lane. As well, variable speed limits are added to keep traffic steadily moving to help prevent tailbacks caused by sudden braking.

In the first phase of the programme, Lanes is lining pipes with diameters of up to 600mm along 13km of the northbound M6 carriageway.

Carillion Kier section manager Chris Padden said UV lining is only just now available in the UK.  "The other option is to install new drainage lines in deep trenches, which has additional health and safety risks, takes longer and can be more costly than UV lining.”

Padden said that Lanes has achieved the target of lining around 600m of pipework a week. Simon Bull, manager of Lanes Group's lining division, said it was a challenge. "To do it while working in a 3.5m-wide space with 135,000 vehicles passing each day just inches away, while working around the needs of other construction colleagues, has been a very interesting challenge indeed."

Lanes has deployed two full-time UV lining teams on the project, along with supporting CCTV survey and jet-vac tanker teams. To speed up the lining process, UV liners up to 200m long are being installed.

"We've had to overcome major challenges, including the need to find buried manholes, refurbish other ones, open up new liner entry and exit points and empty very large amounts of silt and debris from pipes before liners can be installed,” said Bull.

"The learning curve has been steep and intense, but we have rapidly developed new techniques and procedures that will allow us to replicate this sort of success with future large highway schemes."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cold road reclamation in South Africa
    July 18, 2012
    Raubex Construction’s new Cat RM500 rotary mixer is proving its worth on a road reclamation work on a South African highway Part of an extensive motorway network some 185km long, South Africa’s ongoing Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project (GIFP) is creating a modern, world-class toll route system. The new road will provide major impetus to socio-economic growth in the country’s most populous and commercially active region. Being built in stages by the South African National Roads Authority (SANRAL), these r
  • Zaxis-5s biggest-ever project
    January 27, 2014
    Norwegian contractor Carl C Fon has secured its largest-ever road construction contract to complete a 4.6km section of the E18 in the Mysen region of its home country. It started the €25million project in August 2012 and it is scheduled for completion in the summer of 2014.
  • Welsh contractor enlists a ‘road warrior’ for stabilisation work in England
    September 28, 2015
    Groundworks contractor DCM Roadways, based in the southeast Wales town of Monmouth, has brought in an FAE MTM to ensure the best result possible for an access road project. DCM, which specialises in soil stabilisation and road recycling, is working on a solar project in the Forest of Dean area of Gloucestershire county, just across the border in England. The job is for the construction of around 1.2km of stabilised highway access roads.
  • Innovative vehicle test track
    February 24, 2012
    Lafarge Contracting is helping build a sophisticated test track for future vehicles. Prototype vehicles are now being driven today on the new test track built by Lafarge. The pioneering cityscape circuit replicates the road network of an urban environment but is equipped with sophisticated telemetry, communications, monitoring and vehiclecontrol technologies.