Skip to main content

More tenders for Lower Thames Crossing

The winners will build 23km of road connecting to the UK’s longest road tunnel.
By David Arminas April 1, 2021 Read time: 3 mins
The €2.23 billion Lower Thames Crossing - the most environmentally sustainable road project in the UK (north entrance)

Highways England has opened tenders to build two linking roads as part of the €2.23 billion (£1.9 billion) Lower Thames Crossing project near London.

For more than 65 years the Dartford Crossing has been the only River Thames crossing between counties Kent and Essex. Highways England – the government agency responsible for England’s major roads and motorways - says that the ageing bridge and tunnel combination is designed for 135,000 vehicles a day. But it now often sees 180,000 a day which creates congestion at peak periods.

The agency says the planned Lower Thames Crossing will improve journeys by almost doubling road capacity across the river.

The two successful bidders will build 23km of road in total that will connect the longest road tunnel in the UK to the country’s strategic road network.

The €705 million (£600 million) Kent Roads two-stage design and build contract is a for the route from the A2/M2 corridor to 1km south of the southern tunnel entrance, including strategic utilities and environmental interfaces. Work includes 6km of road, including a multi-level junction to connect the A2 to the Lower Thames Crossing. Two so-called “Green Bridges” at Thong Lane & Brewers Road, will combine green spaces with walking, cycling and vehicle access and provide better connectivity for the landscape, ecology and habitats. Brewers Road will also cater for horse riders.

The €1.53 billion (£1.3 billion) Roads North of the Thames contract - also a two-stage design and build deal - will deliver the route from 1km north of the northern tunnel entrance to Junction 29 of the M25 motorway. New link roads are required to connect the route with the M25, A13 and A1089. The contract comprises 16km of road to take the route through the A13 and to join the M25 at Junction 29. Five green bridges are combine planned.

The successful bidders and their supply chains will help make the Lower Thames Crossing the most environmentally sustainable road project ever delivered in the UK, according to Highways England. The winners will support delivery of landscaping that will increase the biodiversity value of the area by 15% by planting over 260 hectares of woodland, converting 400 hectares of arable land into semi-natural habitats and creating new ponds, waterways, ditches and hedgerows. Seven green bridges will connect habitats and species either side of the new road.

The two roads contracts are the final of package of three main works packages to be procured for the scheme. Already awarded are the €2.35 billion (£2 billion) Tunnels and Approaches package and the €191 million (£162.5 million) Integration Partner contract awarded to Jacobs earlier in the year.

“Our challenge is to build the new crossing in a way that not only supports the next generation of low carbon vehicles, but minimises our footprint, and allows us to enhance the natural environment and leave a positive legacy for our neighbours and users,” said Matt Palmer, executive director of the Lower Thames Crossing project.

Related Content

  • Smart motorways coming to a stop?
    November 24, 2021
    Are the UK’s smart motorways coming to a stop?
  • Colombia’s key road transport projects
    May 10, 2019
    A series of major road transport projects are moving ahead in Colombia, with the country’s national infrastructure agency (ANI), handling most of the deals. In the country’s capital, Bogota, design work is now complete on the Calle 13 and Accesos Norte II road projects. The Calle 13 project will see an 11.5km section of route widened so that it features three lanes in either direction. The work will also include building new facilities for pedestrians and cyclists. This project is expected to cost US$1.15 b
  • Tunnel plan for British capital?
    May 14, 2014
    A proposal for an orbital tunnel in UK capital London has been put forward and is now being evaluated. The plan calls for a 35km underground ring road in central London that would carry traffic around the city, in a bid to help reduce the capital’s current chronic congestion. Called the Inner Orbital Route, the tunnel project has an estimated cost of €36.8 billion (£30 billion) and would also include two new crossings of the River Thames. Transport for London (TfL) has been tasked with the job of evaluating
  • Tenders open for England’s A66 northern trans-Pennine route
    October 31, 2019
    A €52 million contract to design the transformation of the A66 northern trans-Pennine route in England is now up for grabs, according to Highways England. A tender is open for dualling the remaining single carriageway sections of the A66 which links the M6 motorway at Penrith in Cumbria and the A1(M) motorway) at Scotch Corner in North Yorkshire. The formal notice for the A66 Preliminary Designer, Construction Technical Advisor and Supervision tender process has been published in the Official Journal of