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M60 Junction
5–8 Widening |
82.4% |
Project Team: Highways Agency (client) Mouchel Parkman
(client representative), Halcrow (designer), AMEC –
Alfred McAlpine Joint Venture (contractor)
Project background
This complex £139.5m scheme provides additional
capacity in the south west quadrant of Manchester’s
orbital motorway, reducing delays, easing congestion
and improving safety. The scheme’s construction
programme was designed around the traffic management
phasing in order to minimise disruption and keep the
116,000 vehicles per day moving through the works.
The scheme required the construction of 16 new bridges,
24 pre-cast concrete portal sign/signal gantries and
several reinforced-earth retaining walls together with
the demolition of 11 original bridges and 23 sign gantries.
Extensive landscaping and planting has softened the
impact of the scheme on the local environment and replaced
areas of vegetation and public open space, which were
lost to the construction works. The opportunity was
taken to reduce road traffic noise by providing screen
mounds and fences.
A Grade II listed dovecote (at Junction 6) was taken
down brick by brick before the works started; this has
since been renovated and re-erected in a local park
Project management approach
By adopting a partnering approach for this project,
risks were identified early and shared by agreement,
and disagreements during the works were resolved more
quickly. It also strongly promoted a more ‘open’
style of management both in financial matters and in
practice, on site.
The environment
One of the most significant improvements has been the
substantial reduction in noise levels adjacent to the
motorway corridor. This has been achieved by building
large earth screen mounds planted with trees and shrubs,
with some having a noise attenuation fence on the crown.
In other areas noise fences have been installed at the
motorway boundary. In addition, the new carriageway
surfacing is constructed from a thin layer of ‘quieter’
asphalt to significantly reduce tyre noise.
Other benefits have also been realised, including:
- Areas of land were acquired
to enable lost wildlife habitats to be recreated.
- These areas have become valuable
refuges for flora and fauna.
- Access to public open space
and amenities has been improved through the addition
of better footpaths, cycleways and bridleways, including
some 'landmark' bridges.
- Twelve drainage outfalls were
approved by the Environment Agency, all having interceptors
to capture oil and other liquid spillages on the motorway
carriageways, before they reach the River Mersey.
- Liaison with the Environment
Agency has ensured that the scheme design has not
adversely affected the surrounding hydrology. Reinforced
concrete bored piles were used to found structures
on contaminated ground to seal off any pollution leakage.
- Provision of more areas of
improved public open space to benefit the local community.
- Planting of 126,000 new trees.
Landmark footbridges
The scheme features a pair of white 'landmark' cable-stayed
bridges, one between Junctions 5 and 6, providing access
to the amenities at Trafford Water Park and areas of
public open space, and the other between Junctions 7
and 8, carrying the Trans Pennine Trail through the
Mersey Valley. These bridges also allowed the closure
of the old underpasses which people originally used
to cross under the motorway.
Demolition of bridges and sign gantries
Most demolition works were carried out overnight, during
full closures of sections of the motorway, with fully
signed diversion routes in operation.
Advance publicity explaining the diversion routes and
signing, and the co-operation of the travelling public
and the emergency services ensured that inconvenience
was reduced as much as possible.
Waste concrete was recycled by crushing to uniform
size and used in construction of the new carriageway.
The steel was separated out and sent for recycling
Explosive demolition
Removal of the Mersey South Slip Road Bridge and the
Mersey South main carriageway bridge at Junction 7 were
carried out by means of two controlled explosive demolitions
at night. The detonation sequence was controlled to
minimise the quantity of debris entering the River Mersey.
Local residents and the press were informed about the
programme for the demolition. The explosions provided
a considerable spectacle for the hundreds of spectators
who came to watch.
Minimising disruption
Relocating services included using directional drilling
techniques underneath Junction 7 and the A56 Chester
Road, to avoid open-cut trenches that would have caused
severe traffic disruption and delays
Respect for the local community
The contractor erected areas of environmental screening
in several locations, to ensure that properties and
amenities were shielded from disruption during major
elements of the construction process.
Consultation and liaison between the Highways Agency,
local residents, local authorities and their elected
representatives began soon after the scheme entered
the National Roads Programme in 1990 and continued through
the Public Consultation and Public Inquiry in 1995.
The scheme design was modified where appropriate following
these consultation exercises.
When construction of the scheme was started in 2003,
the contractor ensured that this close liaison continued
as the design and construction progressed on site.
The Highways Agency was pleased that the level of complaints
from the public during the three years of the construction
was very low for such a large construction project.
Public relations were a priority, with two major exhibitions
being held and four newsletters published.
Additional projects benefiting the local community
included improvements to an animal sanctuary and rejuvenation
works to a fishing lake.
The team always adopted a 'customer first' attitude
when contacting members of the public, landowners, interest
groups, resident groups and their elected representatives
when issues arose, and responded immediately to telephone
calls, letters, emails and requests.
Everything possible was done to minimise the impact
of the works over the three years, and where noise and
disruption were unavoidable, it was undertaken as quickly
and safely as possible.
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