Skip to main content

Jacobs to provide services to Herts, UK

The Jacobs will also have a strategic partnership with PA Consulting’s Global Innovation and Technology Centre, an incubator for startup companies and small enterprises in the Hertfordshire town of Royston.
By David Arminas May 31, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Hertfordshire County Council’s US$10 billion highway, structures and environmental assets to be looked after by Jacobs (image © Peter Moulton/Dreamstime)

Jacobs has been appointed by Hertfordshire County Council in England to provide multi-discipline and flexible highways and environmental professional services.

Jacobs will work collaboratively with Hertfordshire County Council and its supply chain, to provide programme and asset management and technical support to the highway and environmental service. The company said that the aim is to protect and maximise value from Hertfordshire County Council’s US$10 billion highway, structures and environmental assets.

The Jacobs-led team includes a strategic partnership with PA Consulting’s Global Innovation and Technology Centre, an incubator for startup companies and small enterprises in the Hertfordshire town of Royston. Additionally, the team includes sub consultants Tetra Tech, Tony Gee and Brightly, a Siemens company. A written statement from Jacobs said that the “integrated, locally-driven team will deliver enduring outcomes for the Hertfordshire community with a specific focus on sustainability and social value objectives”.

The contract will start in October for an initial five years followed by optional extension periods up to a maximum of 14 years. The estimated annual contract value is $22 million.

“We are developing a collaborative innovation culture with Hertfordshire County Council that will evolve services to meet ambitions for a cleaner, healthier Hertfordshire and grow local small/medium enterprises, suppliers, skills and jobs,” said Kate Kenny, senior vice president at Jacobs.

“Our programme management capability and tools, combined with our global specialists and data solutions ultimately benefit the county’s residents and businesses creating more resilient and effective services for more than a million people who live and work in Hertfordshire,” she said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Amey’s hard-hitting safety DVD supports Highways Agency Safety Week
    October 21, 2013
    Amey is playing a leading role in the fight for zero harm at road works sites with the launch of a hard-hitting DVD in support of a national radio advertising campaign to coincide with the UK Highways Agency’s ‘Safety Week’ (October 21-27 October 2013). The public and regulated services provider’s DVD ‘Changing Behaviours – What Does It Take?’ features powerful scenes of near misses and accidents on the motorway and is designed to make employees think about what more they can do to make they keep themsel
  • UK awards $5 billion traffic management framework contract
    May 4, 2012
    Arup, in partnership with URS Scott Wilson, has been appointed to a new UK national government procurement service framework for traffic management technology research and consultancy services. The pan-government collaborative agreement, which will be available to all UK public sector bodies from next week, is expected to delivery up to US$5 billion of contracts during it four-year lifetime.
  • Nuphalt is well-prepared to meet the growing challenge for road repairs
    November 21, 2023

    2023 is proving to be a great year for the Nuphalt Group. Beginning in January with a move into their brand-new, purpose-built facility in Rugby, UK, utilising new mezzanine floors (increased manufacturing space by 50%), adding state-of-the-art laser cutting equipment and, of course, bringing everything under one roof. And with 100 kW of PV solar power up there, that’s no ordinary roof! The move to a more self-sufficient premises is all part of Nuphalt’s vision for a greener future.

  • Work starts on access route through the centre of Stafford, UK
    February 29, 2016
    Work has started on a US$22.4 million access route through the centre of Stafford in northern England.