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

  • Louis Berger wins Mozambique N303 road upgrade consultancy deal
    February 19, 2015
    Infrastructure consultancy Louis Berger is to provide services worth US$7.6 million for the rehabilitation of Mozambique’s National Road N303. The Sub-Saharan Regional Pipeline Corporation awarded the contract for work on the 350km narrow and unpaved carriageway that crosses Tete province. SSRPC is investing $350 million to upgrade the road that starts at the Zambezi River, where Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe have a common border. The modernised road will be the shortest link to a railway under constructi
  • Road user charging comes to the UK?
    December 14, 2017
    A new funding scheme for England’s proposed Major Road Network was greeted with enthusiasm by local authorities which partly pay for road upkeep. But this enthusiasm may be premature, explains Alan Pauling*
  • Improving water management from roads
    August 19, 2015
    A new road design can improve local water supplies. A new road design could help mitigate heavy flooding during rainy seasons and alleviate water shortages in dry periods. This innovative concept is a winner in the IRF’s Global Road Achievement Awards, in the Environmental Mitigation category. Road designs often exacerbate issues arising from heavy rainfall. However, a new initiative is making roads instruments for harvesting wate and for improving land productivity along the roads. The Roads for Water and
  • PPRS event highlights transport investment shortfall
    April 30, 2015
    The PPRS event in Paris highlighted the need for additional investment in road transportation – David Arminas writes. Consider the global road network. An improved road from one rural African town to another can reduce the journey time from a one-day walk to a one-hour drive. This could save lives through access to a hospital; allow small businesses to work faster by getting in supplies more quickly; allow children to attend a better equipped school. Roads affect society by allowing healthier and bett