Skip to main content

Highways England pilots project to reduce congestion along M62

Highways England (HE) has begun piloting a £7 million ($9 million) project to reduce congestion at the Croft Interchange – where junction 21a of the M6 meets junction 10 of the M62, near Warrington, Cheshire. The project aims to provide drivers with smoother and more reliable journey times.
November 13, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
8101 Highways England (HE) has begun piloting a £7 million ($9 million) project to reduce congestion at the Croft Interchange – where junction 21a of the M6 meets junction 10 of the M62, near Warrington, Cheshire. The project aims to provide drivers with smoother and more reliable journey times.


Once the testing is completed in December / January, electronic information signs and variable mandatory speed limits on the M62 will combine with traffic lights on the motorway link roads from the M6.

In the first phase of the motorway to motorway system, drivers travelling between Junction 9 and Junction 11 of the Eastbound M62 will see the electronic variable message signs in operation, which will display mandatory variable speed limits and other information such as warnings of congestion.

Phase two will see the traffic lights switched on at the end of the link roads onto the eastbound M62. Traffic leaving the M6 will be monitored, and the lights will be controlled to minimise queuing onto the M6.

Money for the project is coming from a £150 million ($114 million) innovation fund, part of the £15 billion ($11 million) allocated to HE in the Government’s 2015 to 2020 Road Investment Strategy.

Andy Withington, HE’s programme delivery manager for the North West, said: “The key aim of the project is to test the novel technology introduced through this pilot project and tackle congestion at peak travel times, especially during the morning rush hour. The link road traffic lights won’t be on all of the time, being limited to the morning peak, but the variable speed limit signs on the M62 eastbound will be working all the time when traffic conditions dictate.

Therefore, when the system is operating, drivers will be expected to obey the traffic lights on the link roads and variable mandatory speed limits displayed on the new M62 electronic signs.”

UTC

Related Content

  • December 3, 2018
    Panasonic in Colorado: Rocky mountain way
    Panasonic is at the heart of a C-V2X project which began last year in Colorado. The company’s smart mobility boss Chris Armstrong tells Adam Hill how it is working out Colorado needs traffic and transport solutions – and fast. The US state’s population has grown 50% in the last 20 years and another 50% hike is predicted in the next 20. It also spends more than $13 billion in roadway crash costs each year. In 2015, 546 people died in traffic-related crashes, and more than 3,000 were seriously injured.
  • January 25, 2018
    Manchester seeks smart but not selective transport solutions
    Smarter transport relies on better communications both with travellers and between transport providers. Andrew Williams reports. Inrix’s prediction that the cost of traffic congestion will rise by 63% to £21bn per year by 2030 clearly illustrates that, in addition to the ongoing inconvenience and inefficiency, ongoing gridlock is a significant drain on the economy. It is against this backdrop that a Cisco-led consortium has launched CitySpire, a smart transport programme that uses location-based services a
  • March 24, 2023
    How digital navigation is key to managing congestion
    Satnav – not costly civil engineering projects – might point us towards better management of congested road networks, argues David Metz of University College London
  • December 19, 2017
    Road user charging comes a step closer in Oregon
    Having been the first US state to introduce the gas tax a century ago, Oregon is now blazing the road user charging trail. Colin Sowman looks at progress to date. For more than a decade, authorities in Oregon have known of the impending decline in fuels tax income and while revenue increased by more than 5% in 2016, that growth will slow considerably this year and income is projected to start declining in 2020.