Skip to main content

London’s Westminster Council goes for gully offenders

Increasing numbers of blocked road drains and gullies has forced London’s Westminster City Council to take a tough stand with offenders The council maintains 16,500 gullies. Around 95% of a gully’s content is natural and can be recycled: taken away to road contractor FM Conway’s drainage treatment plant. Material is separated into solids, organics and water and reused as aggregates and materials in their wider construction business.
February 8, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Increasing numbers of blocked road drains and gullies has forced London’s Westminster City Council to take a tough stand with offenders


The council maintains 16,500 gullies. Around 95% of a gully’s content is natural and can be recycled: taken away to road contractor FM 2329 Conway’s drainage treatment plant. Material is separated into solids, organics and water and reused as aggregates and materials in their wider construction business.

But other items cause major blockages that can lead to serious flooding even after manageable rain levels. Since July, FM Conway has surveyed around 200 gullies with CCTV. Objects found include gold jewellery, knives, vehicle number plates and dozens of mobile phones. Notably, the council said that that gullies around building sites are often blocked with commercial waste – such as sand and concrete. Last year street cleansing teams were called to a gully that was bubbling with an unidentified florescent green liquid and a gully near Oxford Street was found blocked by five full sand bags.

Sometimes, as a last resort, cars must be lifted off the street to gain access to a drain – a costly and time-consuming process.

To counter all this, Westminster City Council is looking to ensure licensed building sites are covering all the costs of cleansing road gullies next to their premises. A sewerage surcharge could be the answer. It would be incorporated into structural licence fees paid by contractors and be based on the number of gullies likely to be affected by the company’s works. It would cover a charge for the council’s contractor and staffing costs associated with cleaning the affected gullies.

FM Conways’ work with CCTV footage is also helping discover pipes and gullies unknown to the council and from which the Greater London Authority is creating a comprehensive inventory. Cleansing teams do not know the condition of the pipe until they send in a push-rod camera. The footage reveals if repairs are needed. If a pipe is damaged the team pump in a liner, followed by a resin, which solidifies and creates a new lining which will last for up to 25 years. However, if a pipe has fully collapsed, no amount of lining will fix it and the pipe will require digging work.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Western Sydney Airport Bulk Earthworks
    November 7, 2023
    The massive Bulk Earthworks project, under development by the federal government-owned Western Sydney Airport (WSA), entails construction of an international airport on the western side of Sydney, Australia.
  • Efficient recycling with FAE
    June 11, 2020
    FAE has updated its heavyweight, multitask attachment with improvements to the systems that control working depth and water injection
  • Innovative solutions to earthmoving needs
    January 3, 2013
    Several manufacturers are offering improved earthmoving machines, with more to come - Mike Woof reports. One of the most notable developments comes from Caterpillar, with the unveiling of a hybrid excavator in the shape of its 336E H model. The machine is having its public launch at the bauma exhibition in Spring 2013 and will start rolling out of the factory in March 2013, while customers will be able to place orders from February 2013. Unlike other hybrid excavators on the market at present, the Cat 336E
  • Hitachi’s ZW180-5 delights the Dutch with additional performance
    March 9, 2015
    Materials handling has been made more efficient for Molenaar Zand en Grond, a Dutch materials yard, after introducing its first Hitachi ZW180-5 wheeled loader. Parent company, the road construction, drainage, sewage and groundworks contractor A. Molenaar, bought the Hitachi ZW180-5 in November for its materials yard subsidiary. The machine is now loading a steady stream of trucks and trailers at Molenaar Zand en Grond BV’s stockyard at Bergambacht, east of Rotterdam. The Hitachi ZW180-5 was delivered by the