Skip to main content

UK’s latest smart motorway goes live on M6

The Midlands got a boost today with the launch of the latest stretch of smart motorway, making greater use of technology on the M6 near Birmingham, bringing improved journeys and less congestion. Opening the hard shoulder to traffic during the busiest times between junctions 5 and 8 on the M6 will improve journey times, especially around Birmingham and marks a milestone for the Highways Agency, after several years of investment in this section of the M6. This ten mile stretch means the benefits can now b
April 16, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
The Midlands got a boost today with the launch of the latest stretch of smart motorway, making greater use of technology on the M6 near Birmingham, bringing improved journeys and less congestion.

Opening the hard shoulder to traffic during the busiest times between junctions 5 and 8 on the M6 will improve journey times, especially around Birmingham and marks a milestone for the 503 Highways Agency, after several years of investment in this section of the M6. This ten mile stretch means the benefits can now be felt continuously from junctions 4 to 10.

The smart motorway was delivered within budget working closely with contractor Carillion. More than 1,700 people have worked on the scheme since construction began in April 2012, almost 30 per cent of whom were from the local area. Materials, such as the concrete, surfacing materials, communications ducts and topsoil have also been sourced locally.

The project included installation of 21 new gantries, refurbishing three existing gantries, resurfacing over 100,000 square metres of carriageway, laying more than 78 miles of cabling and constructing six emergency refuge areas.

The improvements use a range of technologies and operational systems to reduce congestion and smooth the flow of traffic. During busy periods, traffic officers will set overhead message signs to inform drivers they can use the hard shoulder as an extra lane and at what speed to drive.

Highways Agency project manager Rob Edwards said: “Drivers will reap the benefit of the government investing more than US$186 million on this stretch of the M6, with improved journeys and a boost for the economy. The move to smart motorways began in the Midlands on the M42 in 2006. This scheme brings the latest technology to the M6, despite the difficult engineering challenges we faced with the motorway being elevated. More than 160,000 road users stand to benefit each day, now we can open the hard shoulder during the busiest times”.

Neil Taylor, operations manager at the West Midlands Regional Control Centre said: “The information displayed along the motorway has been carefully designed to be intuitive, so drivers should stay alert and follow the information they see. They should only use the hard shoulder when there is a speed limit displayed above it. If there isn’t a speed limit, or there’s a red X over it, then it’s for emergency use only.”

Related Content

  • December 20, 2017
    Mott MacDonald designed M2M metering scheme begins testing
    Mott MacDonald (MM) has designed a Highways England scheme to smooth traffic flows, reduce queues and to combat eastbound congestion on the M62's junction 10 and 11 as well as traffic joining the motorway from the M6 northbound and southbound link roads. The project will operate during 2018 and be monitored to evaluate the benefits. Called The Motorway to Motorway (M2M) metering pilot scheme, it combines variable mandatory speed limits on the M62 and metering using traffic signals between the M6 to M62
  • April 17, 2023
    UK smart motorways scrapped due to 'lack of public confidence'
    'Pause' on roll-out has been made permanent - with £1bn cost also cited as a factor
  • November 18, 2014
    UK’s M6 to get VMS to boost safety
    Four of the latest variable message signs (VMS) are to be installed around junction 35 of the M6 motorway at Carnforth, giving drivers better warnings of incidents and other information about the motorway such as weather conditions. As part of the work, new CCTV cameras will be mounted on the VMS signs and standalone masts, allowing Highways Agency traffic officers at the North West Regional Control Centre at Newton-le-Willows to monitor and manage motorway incidents more effectively. A similar, US$2
  • July 11, 2012
    780 SolarLite road studs deployed on UK motorway accident black spot
    An unlit stretch of the M42 motorway in the UK, identified as an accident black spot area due to the lack of street lighting linked to increased accident rates, has seen the installation of 780 Astucia SolarLite road studs. The studs, along the carriageway of the M42 from junctions 1 to 3a, give drivers up to 900 metres visibility of the road layout ahead, which is up to ten times greater than would be possible from traditional retro-reflective ‘cats eye’ road studs. In addition, the existing two metre whi