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Eiffage, Kier, Ferrovial and BAM to cut HS2 viaduct carbon by 50% with new design

Artist's impression of the Wendover Dean viaduct (Image courtesy of HS2)

The Eiffage, Kier, Ferrovial and BAM Nuttall joint venture is on track to more than halve the amount of embedded carbon on one of the HS2 viaducts it is building thanks to a new ‘double composite’ design.

The contractors, working with design partner ASC (a joint venture between Arcadis Setec and COWI) and specialist architect Moxon, will build the Wendover Dean Viaduct in Buckinhamshire using two steel girders sandwiched between two layers of reinforced concrete to create a strong but lightweight span, which they claim will significantly reduce embedded carbon in the structure.

The 450m viaduct was recently given approval by Buckinghamshire Council under Schedule 17 of the HS2 Act and it will be the first major railway viaduct in the UK to use the double composite approach.

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