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

  • UK’s M6 tolled motorway for sale
    June 21, 2016
    For sale: one UK toll motorway along with operating business. Well maintained. Price negotiable. David Arminas looks at what is on offer As if right on cue, a French articulated truck starts to back up along the hard shoulder at an exit area of M6toll. The manoeuvring is watched from an office inside the nearby M6toll headquarters. Inside, Andy Pearson, chief executive of M6toll, glances over his shoulder and interrupts his presentation to World Highways. “He’s probably missed the dedicated wide-load
  • State-of-the art road tunnels in construction and use of ITS
    April 25, 2013
    A wealth of major road tunnel construction projects and significant cant ITS installations within existing key road tunnels have been recently completed or will soon be underway. Guy Woodford examines some of them. A state-of-the art Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) - the 10th largest ever to be built worldwide will be put to work later this year on New Zealand Transport Agency’s landmark Waterview Connection project in Auckland. The giant Herrenknecht-manufactured machine will be used to construct the twin 2.5
  • It’s ITS upgrade time for New York’s George Washington Bridge
    September 16, 2015
    The electronic highway signage system and field devices for New York’s George Washington Bridge are to undergo a major overhaul in a US$65.1 million project. Bridge owner Port Authority of New York has approved the project to replace the intelligent transportation system which includes the upgrade and replacement of 11 variable message signs and the installation of seven new ones.
  • SRL’s outta sight VMS
    June 10, 2025


    England’s National Highways agency is using a variable message sign(VMS)  to display non-regulatory messages to indicate that maintenance teams may be out of sight.

    The is the first time that such messages have been displayed in an effort to better communicate to drivers that ahead lay obstacles, diversions road works. The system from SRL Traffic Systems is displaying wording not usually used, including ‘Working even out of view’, to provide an awareness of operations not within eyesight of a driver or outside of the public eye.