Skip to main content

M27 contract for McCann

Highways England has awarded an M27 contract to McCann.
By MJ Woof July 29, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Contractor McCann is working on the project to upgrade the M27 in Southern England

Nottingham-based civil and electrical engineering firm McCann is working on a major contract for Highways England. The work is for the £244 million smart motorway project between junctions 4-11 of the M27.

The scheme will deliver sophisticated smart motorway technology to the major route along England’s south coast. This will help to improve road safety, cut congestion and reduce travel times between Southampton and Portsmouth, two of Hampshire’s busiest and largest cities.

Works started on the scheme in January 2019. Meanwhile, McCann started its work on the project in April 2020. The firm is installing and upgrading motorway communications systems, street lighting and traffic signage as part of the Bam Nuttall Morgan Sindall Joint Venture (BMJV).

The M27 falls within Highways England’s Area 3 Asset Support Contract and the South East Regional Control Centre. It not only connects Southampton and Portsmouth, but provides quick links to the M3 at junction 4 - with access to Winchester and Basingstoke.

As well as congestion and travel time improvements, Highways England has identified several additional benefits from the scheme including facilitating economic growth through increased motorway capacity and where possible, enhancing the local environment while reducing the scheme's impact on the environment.

The 25km stretch will be widened to four lanes with changes to junction slip roads as well as new CCTV cameras, electronic information signs and signals, emergency areas and the hardening of the central reservation. McCann is working on the scheme until March 2021 to install all necessary communications and signage, as well as LED street lighting to improve road safety alongside associated infrastructure.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Managing urban motorway complexity in Sydney
    October 4, 2012
    Sydney’s Hills M2 motorway is being widened while still carrying traffic and meeting tough environmental criteria More than 100,000 vehicles and over 27,000 bus commuters use the Hills M2 motorway on a typical workday, making it one of Sydney’s busiest motorway corridors. Owned and managed by Hills Motorway Ltd (HML) and a key part of the city’s orbital motorway network, the road stretches over 21km, providing a seamless link between the Lane Cove Tunnel and Westlink M7. The Hills M2 Upgrade is one of many
  • Malaysia’s massive road building project is advancing the use of technology
    August 10, 2020
    Malaysia’s huge Pan Borneo Highway project is benefiting from the use of some of the latest technologies in its planning, design and construction
  • Siemens refurb signals savings
    February 6, 2012
    Major refurbishment of traffic technology across Medway, part of the Thames Gateway area, is underway to significantly reduce energy and communications costs with newly-developed products from Siemens.Aimed at reducing carbon emissions and power consumption, the project near London, involves replacing over 600 signal heads with new Siemens retrofit technology at sites in Rainham, Rochester, Gillingham and Chatham. Communications equipment is also being upgraded with the deployment of new UG405 outstation tr
  • Testing and striping underway for Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel
    October 18, 2018
    Crews have been working flat out on the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle to install and test thousands of components and 90 interconnected systems.The client, Washington State Department of Transportation, said that Seattle Tunnel Partners began installation inside the double-deck State Route 99 tunnel in March after crews completed construction of the upper and lower roadways. STP said that testing could be complete by late September and the tunnel could open as soon as this fall after an approximate three-w