Skip to main content

Balfour extends Lincolnshire maintenance deal

The €385 million highways maintenance contract is a six-year extension from Lincolnshire County Council in England.
By David Arminas December 7, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The recently installed highways maintenance operational control hub for Balfour’s client Lincolnshire County Council (image courtesy Balfour Beatty Living Places)

Balfour Beatty Living Places has been awarded a €385 million (£330 million) six-year extension to its highways maintenance contract with Lincolnshire County Council in England.

The extension builds on the current six-year contract which ends in 2026. The new deal will run until spring 2032. It covers The council’s 9,240km of carriageways, provide drainage cleaning services as well as winter and reactive highways maintenance such as gritting, road repairs and traffic management.

The company said the contract will continue to employ 183 people, including 10 apprenticeship and graduate positions as part of Balfour Beatty’s commitment to the 5% Club. By joining the 5% Club, employers seek to achieve 5% of their workforce in earn-and-learn positions. These include apprentices, sponsored students and graduates who, within five years of joining the company, have a formalised training scheme.

Balfour said it will use its operational control hub, which came on line earlier this year, to monitor all activities in real-time and drive efficiencies across the local road network. Steve Helliwell, managing director of Balfour Beatty Living Places, said the hub serves as a platform for teams to promptly address network issues, facilitating real-time digital planning. It empowers efficient organisation of both reactive and emergency works, along with streamlined defect reporting in a dynamic digital environment.

“Today’s announcement will see us continue to provide a best-in-class highways maintenance service,” said Helliwell, “while offering customer-focused solutions in a collaborative partnership and leaving a lasting positive legacy for the communities we serve.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Highway 407 Revisited – smart tollroad extension
    June 7, 2016
    In the late 1990s, World Highways published a supplement on construction of Canada’s Highway 407, the world’s first all-electronic toll road. But how successful has it been? David Arminas reports from Toronto The head office for 407 ETR Concession Company is a low-rise building next to exit 59, just north of Toronto, Canada’s economic powerhouse. The building may be non-descript but inside is the advanced technical heart of Highway 407 ETR – Express Toll Route. It houses the latest toll monitoring techno
  • SBS modified asphalt delivers added benefits
    February 17, 2012
    Special additives are used in asphalt mixes to give them added benefits as Patrick Smith reports
  • Lima's massive $2 billion airport project
    March 4, 2025
    Peru’s capital, Lima, is to benefit from a massive new international airport, which will be one of the largest in Latin America – Mike Woof writes
  • Bridge monitoring technology
    July 1, 2019
    A new partnership between SGS and AIMSight is allowing fully remote continuous structural health monitoring (SHM) of bridges. This utilises using smart crack monitoring sensors and data analytics and is compliant with existing NDT standards. The new SGS AIMSight structural health monitoring solution provides continuous, real time monitoring of the health of critical assets to a higher level of precision than conventional SHM systems and structural inspection schemes. This serves as an early warning system