Skip to main content

Major Danish project for Atkins

Engineering firm Atkins is now handling design work on a major highway and bridge project in Denmark.
March 1, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Engineering firm 3005 Atkins is now handling design work on a major highway and bridge project in Denmark. The firm is carrying out preliminary studies and design work for several new and existing bridge structures, as part of a widening programme on the Køge Bay highway in Denmark.

The project involves widening the highway from six to eight lanes will require the construction of seven new bridges, extension of nine existing bridges and re-insulation of three bridges.

The 8km long section of highway, which carries over 100,000 vehicles/day, will remain operational whilst the work is taking place. Traffic will run alongside the extended lanes. Atkins will work closely with the 2284 Danish Road Directorate and other consultants working on the extension to ensure that disruption to traffic is kept to a minimum. "This is a highly complicated assignment due to the large number of bridges, and the need to keep traffic flowing throughout the construction process. With 100,000 vehicles using the motorway every day this will require expert project management to ensure the work proceeds as smoothly and as safely as possible so that motorists are not unduly inconvenienced," said Atkins' market director Martin Svenning Nielsen.

 The first phase of the project will see the construction of a new bridge across Karlstrup Marsh, located next to the existing highway. The bridge will be constructed on piles due to the soft subsoil and to protect the natural environment of the area. The bridge's construction will not interfere with existing highway traffic and it will also be used as a temporary road during the construction work. Atkins will begin design work on the project immediately. Martin Svenning Nielsen and his team of bridge experts from the former Gimsing & Madsen consultancy, acquired by Atkins last year, have consulted on a number of highway structures in Jutland, Denmark. The team also served as client advisors for the construction of Denmark's longest, tallest valley bridge over Funder Valley Silkeborg.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Key Florida highway link wins major award
    July 2, 2014
    A major highway connection project located in Tampa, Florida has won a 2014 Outstanding Project Award from the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) and the Florida Institute of Consulting Engineers (FICE). The link was opened in January 2014 and was engineered by designer Atkins. The 1.6km-long I-4/Selmon Connector links I-4 with the Lee Roy Selmon Expressway. The US$425 million Connector now carries over 24,000 vehicles/day, which includes some 2,000 heavy vehicles/day. With the construction of the
  • Danish date for ViaTherm LongDot
    May 22, 2019
    Geveko Markings says that better visibility, reduction of noise and increased road safety are the benefits its new ViaTherm LongDot road marking. ViaTherm LongDot has been developed in collaboration with Vejdirektoratet - the Danish Road Directorate – and several of its partners within the highways sector, says Geveko. Road markings everywhere are based mainly on two types of markings. The ordinary flat road marking (Type I) and the structured profiled marking (Type II). Flat markings are noiseless
  • Widening works: road user’s nightmare or operator’s challenge?
    March 14, 2017
    Early - and continuous planning - is essential for successful road widening projects. By Nina Sacagiu, project manager, and Laurent Charles-Nicolas, project director, at Egis. Keeping goods and people moving safely is the primary objective of any transport authority across the world. Delivering this objective on motorways and making the most out of network capacity requires all the resources, skills and ingenuity of those in charge of managing the infrastructure. When the network can no longer cope wit
  • Fehmarnbelt hearings to start
    September 24, 2020
    The Danish-German project has come under financial and environmental criticism.