Skip to main content

Key Heathrow Airport link road undergoes repair

Hounslow Highways, working together with other Eurovia UK divisions including Surfacing, Contracting, Specialist Treatments and Euromark, has completed road reconstruction works on Stanwell Road West - one of the London Borough of Hounslow’s main link roads to Heathrow Airport. A large number of heavy goods vehicles and buses using the 80km/h dual carriageway results in significant loading on the road. Initial plans were to give Stanwell Road West complete reconstruction from the foundation level upwards
October 1, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Effective planning ensured a major road link to Heathrow Airport was repaired quickly and efficiently
Hounslow Highways, working together with other 3281 Eurovia UK divisions including Surfacing, Contracting, Specialist Treatments and Euromark, has completed road reconstruction works on Stanwell Road West - one of the London Borough of Hounslow’s main link roads to Heathrow Airport.

A large number of heavy goods vehicles and buses using the 80km/h dual carriageway results in significant loading on the road. Initial plans were to give Stanwell Road West complete reconstruction from the foundation level upwards due to rutting and reflective cracking. However extensive tests carried out in collaboration with Test Consult and 2374 Jean Lefebvre UK revealed that there were no issues with the concrete carriageway base.

A new solution was designed by Jean Lefebvre UK to treat cracks and joints in the concrete and allow for Flexiplast to be applied on top of a regulating course prior to the installation of new asphalt layers.

The works were not without challenges. With a high pressure fuel line for the airport crossing the road, advanced line searches and meetings with BPA (British Pipeline Authority) technicians were required to allow the work to be carried out safely. And as Flexiplast has to be laid in dry weather, it was necessary to ensure the timings for each stage of the works were exactly right.

Crew flexibility was also tested when a collapsed sewer in nearby Hatton Road created a diversion route along Stanwell Road West. A different diversion had to be arranged and was managed by taking out a traffic island and a streetlight on Hatton Road.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • TRL delivers its vision
    July 31, 2012
    The UK's world-renowned TRL (Transport Research Laboratory) is celebrating its 75th birthday this year, and the objective of its work has not changed In 1938 Richard Stradling, director, wrote that "the objective of all the research work at RRL [now TRL] is to accumulate that body of scientific knowledge which is an essential factor in the economical and efficient construction and maintenance of our roads. Practical application of the results must be the aim throughout." While TRL's remit today is far more
  • Crack infill system ideal reinstatement solution
    February 17, 2012
    Overnight repair work on a major English motorway has avoided the major traffic disruption and significantly increased road surfacing costs that would have occurred if left untreated.
  • Reduced emissions, costs, with recycled asphalt
    February 21, 2012
    Recycling is a key issue for asphalt road construction, with many technologies now coming to market. Bith an ever increasing emphasis on sustainability forcing change in the construction sector in Europe and North America, the highway sector now has to seek new solutions.
  • Brisbane’s Airport: Innovative Management of One of the World’s Busiest Runways
    June 26, 2014
    When it comes to runways, there are few busier then Brisbane’s main runway. Servicing both domestic and international travel, with over 200,000 movements per year, operating without a curfew Brisbane’s main runway is the busiest in Australia. For maintenance, crews only have a limited period of time to determine the pavement condition, normally during the night, making the detection of pavement faults difficult. To resolve this issue, a new high speed pavement scanner was used to rapidly survey the pavem