Skip to main content

Island Roads is on the march along the UK’s Isle of Wight

Ringway Island Roads recently completed a major 12km upgrade to one of the UK’s most iconic roads. The upgrade to the Military Road, on the Isle of Wight in the English channel, is the largest carriageway improvement project delivered in a single scheme by Ringways’ Island Roads division. The project was part of the Isle of Wight’s Highway Improvement Programme which is financed in the main through a grant of €535 million awarded by the UK’s Department for Transport. The section between the villages
November 21, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Ringway Island Roads has resurfaced the iconic Military Road on the Isle of Wight in the English Channel
2393 Ringway Island Roads recently completed a major 12km upgrade to one of the UK’s most iconic roads.


The upgrade to the Military Road, on the Isle of Wight in the English channel, is the largest carriageway improvement project delivered in a single scheme by Ringways’ Island Roads division. The project was part of the Isle of Wight’s Highway Improvement Programme which is financed in the main through a grant of €535 million awarded by the UK’s 5432 Department for Transport.
 
The section between the villages of Brook and Chale was resurfaced and, where necessary, rebuilt in a scheme lasting just over four weeks. The entire 19.3km of the Military Road has now been upgraded by Island Roads.
 
The area upgraded amounted to 65,000m² and used 24,000 tonnes of high-performance asphalt. This included 17,831 tonnes of RecoFoam supplied by Wight Building Materials which reprocessed and re-used asphalt from the various projects on the Isle of Wight.

The upgrade also used 5,311 tonnes of high-specification ULM asphalt (hot mix thin-wearing course system), also supplied by Wight Building Materials, and 1,140 tonnes of AC20 HDM used as an alternative heavy-duty base layer for particularly higher stress areas.
 
Island Roads scheduled the project for outside the main holiday season but before the onset of winter when severe conditions - and resulting delays - could be expected. Work was also carried out around the clock to reduce disruption and continual liaison was undertaken with local business and residents to accommodate their access needs wherever possible, explained Keith Gourlay, Island Roads construction manager.

“We were pleased to be able to deliver this major improvement project with only a small number of lost shifts - through issues such as adverse weather and ground conditions - and we hope residents and tourists will now enjoy a smoother ride on this scenic and historic stretch of road,” he said.

The road – one of the UK’s most photographed highways – was reopened with a parade of vintage vehicles, which was intended to drive home the message that the Military Road is a route to be enjoyed at a leisurely pace.

3281 Eurovia - ultimately owned by 5177 Vinci - is the parent company of Ringway Island Roads that operates solely on the Isle of Wight.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Balfour Beatty begins construction of €23.05mn Merseyside motorway link
    January 31, 2014
    Balfour Beatty this week began construction on a €23.05 million (£19 million) scheme to bypass two congested villages and link communities in Sefton along the west coast of Merseyside in Northwest England directly to the M57 and M58 motorways. The road will be 4.5km long and connect the A565 Southport Road to the motorway junction at Switch Island, avoiding the villages of Thornton and Netherton. The newly designated A5758 Broom’s Cross Road will relieve long-standing traffic issues in the area and provid
  • Keeping tunnels safe
    July 20, 2012
    In 2006 Traficon won the first project on the world's first artificial island, the iconic Palm Jumeirah in Dubai, to provide incident detection and traffic data collection along the main arterial road. The technology used included 18 detection units and was won with Siemens Building Technology. The company also won the contract for the tunnel: 26 detection units, in cooperation with Japanese Kinden Corporation. "The Palm Jumeirah vehicular tunnel is in fact the third tunnel (the others are the airport tunne
  • One careful owner
    September 24, 2013
    A 70 year-old driver from New York in the US has clocked record distances in his 1966 vintage Volvo. Owned from new the Volvo P1800 has clocked an incredible 4.8 million km (3 million miles). The man is an enthusiastic driver covering anything from 96,000-160,000km/year (60,000-100,000 miles/year) and not only in the US, but also in Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Mexico, the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK.
  • The cycle of potholes in the UK
    May 9, 2019
    Since 2015 almost a million potholes have been recorded annually by UK local authorities, with the 2016 count reaching 1,088,965, according to an insurance provider. The Insurance Emporium obtained data from 175 local authorities and compared it to the incidence of injury and damage claims made against these authorities by cyclists. During 2017-18, there were 335 pothole damage and injury claims filed against local authorities. Personal and dental injuries to cyclists accounted for 16% of these and d