Skip to main content

England to upgrade concrete road surfaces

Concrete roads make up almost 650km - 4% - of England’s motorway and major A-road network.
By David Arminas April 13, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Many sections of the London orbital M25 motorway are concrete (image © Peter Fleming/Dreamstime)

Highways England has it announced two contracts worth nearly €335 million (£285 million) to upgrade concrete roads, most of them built in 1960s and 1970s.

Concrete roads make up almost 650km - 4% - of England’s motorway and major A-road network. Most are along the eastern side of the country, in the North East, Yorkshire, East Anglia and the South East, with some smaller stretches in other regions.

Over the next five years, Highways England will work with engineering and construction companies Morgan Sindall Infrastructure, John Sisk, VolkerFitzpatrick, Colas, Dyer & Butler and Tarmac on a long-term programme to repair or replace the concrete surfaces.

A “Reconstruction Framework” contract worth €256 million (£218) million which will see Morgan Sindall Infrastructure and John Sisk on a design and build arrangement to demolish concrete road surfaces that are in poor condition and replace them with a smoother surface.

The other contract, Lifecycle Extension Works Framework, is worth €78.5 million (£67 million). In this deal, VolkerFitzpatrick, Colas, Dyer & Butler and Tarmac will deliver repairs to maximise the life of the existing concrete road surfaces.

The programme includes plans to work with our contractors to recycle and reuse materials wherever possible.

The works are part of the UK government's second five-year Road Investment Strategy published last year to maintain and renew the UK’s strategic road network.

“Concrete roads have served the country well since they were first built half a century ago and have proved tough and durable over the years,” said Martin Fellows, Highways England regional director. “This is [our] biggest concrete road renewals programme.”

The first of the contracts to revitalise concrete road surfaces, a €45.7 million (£39 million) deal, was awarded earlier this year to infrastructure and engineering companies AECOM and Atkins for design, supervision and project management services.

Highways England is the wholly government-owned company responsible for modernising, maintaining and operating England’s motorways and major A roads.

Related Content

  • Italian highway investments
    March 5, 2012
    The Italian island of Sicily is to benefit from major investment in its road network, in a move designed to help boost its economy.
  • Italian highway investments
    May 3, 2012
    The Italian island of Sicily is to benefit from major investment in its road network, in a move designed to help boost its economy.
  • Balfour Beatty wins Midlands road technology maintenance package
    April 23, 2014
    Balfour Beatty has secured its third Regional Technology Maintenance Contract (RTMC) from the Highways Agency. This deal is worth some €10.56 million (£8.7 million) over five years. The package involves maintaining around 28,000 technology assets on behalf of the Highways Agency and will cover both the Highways Agency’s Area 7 (the East Midlands) and Area 9 (the West Midlands). The technology service provided by Balfour Beatty includes responsibility for managing and maintaining road-side technology systems
  • Scotland’s new Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary
    December 23, 2015
    The new Queensferry Crossing under construction in Scotland will be the third landmark bridge spanning the Forth Estuary - Mike Woof writes When the new Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary opens at the end of 2016, it will be the third landmark bridge to be built spanning this short stretch of water. Lying alongside the existing road bridge and the historic rail bridge, this new structure will be as groundbreaking as the two earlier crossings were at the time of their construction.