C+S October 2022 Vol. 8 Issue 10

Water + Stormwater

Channel Sponsor: Presto Geosystems | www.prestogeo.com

The UK government has continued to discuss the importance of deliver- ing an infrastructure revolution to help level up the country and put the country on its path towards becoming carbon net zero by 2050. Within this financial year, there is going to be an investment of £27 billion towards structural improvements alone. As leading wet civil engineers, Land & Water maintains and enhances a variety of material and natural structures to safeguard the future of the UK’s waterways. From restoring the Grand Cascade Apron at Blenheim Palace to erecting new bridges across different parts of the UK, the company prides itself on having the specialist knowledge and sustainable capabilities to carry out essential structural works that aim to improve the environmental and economical landscape of the UK. After having recently opened its new regional hub in Newcastle upon Tyne, which sees its offering extend North, Land & Water is using its specialist equipment and marine expertise to demolish and rebuild the Ro-Ro Linkspan bridge at Tees Dock. This not only redevelops the RoRo to allow for larger vessels to berth but it strengthens the position of Teesport as the UK’s Northern Gateway for international trade. Land & Water’s Contracts Manager, Andy McBride, says: “Working with PD Ports to redevelop the Ro-Ro and allow larger vessels to berth at Tees Dock is incredibly significant for Land & Water. “We are very much looking forward to consolidating our place within the northern infrastructure sector in what is an extremely exciting time for the re - gion as it continues to show it is a truly outward-looking, international region ready to welcome the cutting-edge sectors of the future.” Bridges over water are a critical component of our country’s infra- structure and are vital in connecting communities, goods, and services. Complex and specialist projects are what Land & Water does best. In Taplow, Berkshire, the firm installed a footbridge over the River Thames to connect Ray Mill Island with a new housing development. The construction of the bridge from the land was not possible, due to the complex riverside location of the site, meaning the project team had How Land & Water is maintaining and enhancing material and natural structures to safeguard the future of the UK’s waterways

to install an extensive amount of piled foundations whilst reinforcing concrete abutments to support a statement bridge. This challenge was then accentuated by the need to complete one of the abutments entirely from the water requiring specialist equipment, including pontoons and cranes specifically designed for the task. The 40-tonne bridge was then delivered in pieces and assembled a mile down river. Land & Water has always prided itself on being an innovative contrac- tor and finding solutions to complex access problems. Most recently, Land & Water completed works at the ‘Unlocking the Severn’ fish pass construction site at Holt Weir, along the River Severn in Worcestershire. One of the many highlights from the project was that it successfully placed a 100t crane onto a 17-piece Ravestein pontoon

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October 2022

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