Skip to main content

New Holland's motorway deployment

A fleet of compact and zero tailswing New Holland excavators has been deployed to assist with motorway crash barrier replacement work.
February 6, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A New Holland E235B reduced tailswing tracked excavator at work on the motorway
A fleet of compact and zero tailswing 5895 New Holland excavators has been deployed to assist with motorway crash barrier replacement work.

The work is on one of the busiest sections of the M62 in County Yorkshire, northern England, and local civil engineering contractor 1147 K Rouse has deployed eight reduced tailswing tracked machines (four E235Bs and four E135Bs) as well two compact radius MH City wheeled excavators between junctions 27 and 28, south of the city of Leeds. The machines are being used to install new drainage prior to the replacement of the existing steel fences with the now mandatory concrete barriers.

With only one lane of each side of the motorway closed during the work, the space to operate in is limited.

While the E235B tracked machines are used in the central reservation itself as primary earthmovers to excavate the drainage channels, and their smaller E135B cousins work predominantly on backfilling, the MH City machines are used to transport and install materials on site. As a result, they frequently work in the closed lane of the motorway.

"Their great advantage in such a confined area is that they are virtually zero tailswing, which is obviously a very important safety feature in this line of work," said Jim McGibbon, the company's plant manager.

It was this combination of safety and productivity that initially persuaded main contractor 1146 Balfour Beatty to employ K Rouse on the job. "They became aware of it through cross hire, and saw a distinct advantage of using the City machines along with other compact radius models," said McGibbon.

Now the company has been awarded the contract for similar work between junctions 29 and 30 of the M62 which is due to start shortly.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Why Hitachi rental electric excavators are a perfect fit
    July 1, 2025
    When Jurgen van Uijthoven needed an electric excavator for a short-term project, he knew exactly who to ask. The long-standing customer of Hitachi Construction Machinery sub-dealer Pellen BV found an ideal solution to win the tender and complete the work.
  • Causeway and immersed road for LagoonHull
    December 1, 2021
    The agency proposing the UK’s LagoonHull project says it’s development and construction costs could be between €1.2-2.4 billion.
  • Advanced technologies will increase the wear life of bitumen further
    February 28, 2012
    Bitumen has been used for thousands of years, but now a wide variety of products are available that can be added to it to produce blends with improved properties. According to the Refined Bitumen Association (RBA) bitumen is the oldest known engineering material. Indeed, the organisation says that its versatility as a construction material is unparalleled, and having been used as an adhesive, sealant and waterproofing agent for over 8,000 years, its uses include the construction and maintenance of roads, ai
  • Cowi wins Massey Tunnel design
    July 22, 2022
    Cowi has won a contract as owner's engineer for an eight-lane replacement immersed tunnel under the Fraser River near the Pacific coast city of Vancouver. Cowi said it will draw on its experience designing the original four-lane George Massey Tunnel in 1959 and whose removal the engineering firm will later oversee.