Skip to main content

Skanska to start Black Cat upgrade

The A428 upgrade work in England was awarded in 2021 to create a 16km dual carriageway to improve journeys between Milton Keynes, Bedford and Cambridge, near London.
By David Arminas November 30, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
A three-tier junction at the Black Cat Roundabout will be among the junction improvements (image courtesy Skanska)

Skanska has secured more funding and will start work on England’s delayed A428 Black Cat highway improvement by the end of the year.

The A428 upgrade work was awarded in early 2021 to create a 16km dual carriageway to improve journeys between Milton Keynes, Bedford and Cambridge, north of London. But a legal challenge by the pressure group Transport Action Network has been delaying work and which has resulted in costs increasing from the original €581 million to €750 million.

Transport Action Network accuses the UK government of having a default solution to traffic congestion that is simply to dual highways, regardless of the increased CO₂ and at the expense of investing in more sustainable public transport such as cycling routes.

Skanska said it has secured nearly €27 million more in funding and the project’s client, National Highways, says work on site can start by the end of this year for the scheme is set to open by 2027. Skanska, working in close collaboration with design partner Mott MacDonald, is responsible for the design and build of the scheme and involve upgrading the route running from the Black Cat roundabout near St Neots to Caxton Gibbet.

A three-tier junction at the Black Cat Roundabout will be among the junction improvements. It will also create better routes for walkers, cyclists and horse riders and deliver better connections to St Neots and its train station. The route is the only remaining stretch of single carriageway between the M1 near Milton Keynes and Cambridge.

Around 25,000 vehicles travel on the A428 between Cambridge Road and Caxton Gibbet every day. But population growth and commercial investments in the area means the volume could reach around 33,000 vehicles by 2040.

Meanwhile, the UK government has allocated €825.3 million for road repairs in south-east England with each local highway authority being given €26.8 million this financial year and a similar amount will be handed over in the 2024/25 financial year. The remaining funding will be provided until 2034. Mark Harper, UK transport secretary, said the funding is part of a national plan to resurface more than 5,000 roads in the next 11 years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Upgrade work starts on junction of London’s orbital motorway M25
    February 20, 2015
    Work has started on a €136 million road improvement project on the UK’s London ring road, the M25 motorway. Crews from Balfour Beatty and Skanska have moved onto the interchange between the A13 national road and the M25 at junction 30 near Thurrock in the county Essex. The A13 on approach to the junction will be widened to four lanes in each direction and the junction itself will have dedicated link roads between the M25 and the A13. “Traffic at the junction is expected to grow by up to a quarter b
  • The radically changing face of UK highways management
    May 14, 2014
    The British Government policy paper ‘Action for Roads: A network for the 21st century’ sets out radical change to the strategic way roads are funded and managed – including plans to turn the Highways Agency into a Government-owned company and a pledge to invest over €33.4 billion (£28 billion) in roads maintenance between 2015 and 2020. Jenny Moten, Highways Agency divisional director for Network Services, gave a keynote presentation on the new approach to strategic highways management during the Road Safet
  • New UK dual carriageway opening
    December 20, 2016
    Drivers in the UK are to benefit from the opening of a new dual carriageway connection. The section of road is a key route for Highways England, improving the connection between junction 19 of the M6 and junction 7 of the M56 motorways. The new A556 Knutsford to Bowdon link road will cut congestion and journey times for drivers in the area. As part of the £192 million project to build the new dual carriageway between, Highways England has remodelled slip roads at Yarwood Heath and Bowdon roundabouts. The
  • Four lanes for Estonia’s Tartu-Nõo highway
    March 9, 2022
    The 16.5km route in Estonia will be safer, according to Janno Sammul, head of the development department at the Estonian Transport Administration, Transpordiamet.