Skip to main content

UK’s M3 motorway gets first orange smart motorway emergency area

The first of a new-style smart motorway emergency stop area is being trialled on the M3 in England’s county Surrey. The redesigned emergency area has a highly visible orange road surface and better signs to help improve its visibility make it more obvious to drivers on smart motorways, according to Highways England.
July 19, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Highways England: safer with an orange

The first of a new-style smart motorway emergency stop area is being trialled on the M3 in England’s county Surrey.

The redesigned emergency area has a highly visible orange road surface and better signs to help improve its visibility make it more obvious to drivers on smart motorways, according to 8100 Highways England.

The first of the new emergency areas went live on the M3 near the town of Camberley in July. More upgrades are planned should the trial be successful, said Highways England.  This change is part of an ongoing review into the design and spacing of emergency areas on smart motorways that is due to report in the autumn, said Jim O’Sullivan, Highways England chief executive.

Smart motorways use variable speed limits to manage traffic flow, new technology to give drivers better information on road conditions ahead and – in smart motorway upgrades delivered since 2004 – convert the hard shoulder into an extra traffic lane.

Highways England is the wholly government-owned company responsible for modernising, maintaining and operating England’s motorways and major A roads.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • England to upgrade concrete road surfaces
    April 13, 2021
    Concrete roads make up almost 650km - 4% - of England’s motorway and major A-road network.
  • New guidelines to improve highway emergency response
    July 6, 2012
    New guidelines have been introduced to improve how the Highways Agency (HA) and emergency services work together. Under the guidelines, part of a Government strategy to reduce the US$1.5billion (£1bn) cost of motorway incidents, the police, fire and ambulance services and the HA have signed up to the CLEAR booklet - drawn up by Agency to tackle congestion caused by lane closures. Launched last year by Roads Minister Mike Penning, The CLEAR (Collision, Lead, Evaluate, Act, Reopen) initiative aims to get tra
  • Off road trials for electric highways technology
    August 11, 2015
    Following the completion of the feasibility study commissioned by Highways England into dynamic wireless power transfer technologies, off road trials of the technology needed to power electric and hybrid vehicles on England’s major roads are due to take place later this year. The trials are the first of their kind and will test how the technology would work safely and effectively on the country’s motorways and major A roads, allowing drivers of ultra-low emission vehicles to travel long distances without
  • Yotta wins first Horizons software contract in Australia and New Zealand
    January 15, 2016
    Yotta Australia, the authorised distributor of Horizons software in Australia and New Zealand, has won its first contracts for the visualised asset management platform. The recently signed software and service agreement will see Horizons, a Software-as-a-Service platform, support two large-scale Maintenance Alliance Contracts encompassing more than 7,500km of arterial road network for VicRoads, the road and traffic authority in the state of Victoria.