Lincolnshire County Council has awarded Balfour Beatty Living Places (BBLP) a six-year highways maintenance contract extension valued at £330m.
The extension extends the current six-year contract, which is due to end in 2026, until Spring 2032.
BBLP said it will continue to work closely with the council to maintain the county’s 9,240 kilometres of carriageways, provide drainage cleaning services as well as winter and reactive highways maintenance such as gritting, road repairs and traffic management.
Managing director Steve Helliwell said the contract extension was ‘testament to the strong relationship we have built’.
He said: ‘Today’s announcement will see us continue to provide a best-in-class highways maintenance service, whilst offering customer focused solutions in a collaborative partnership and leaving a lasting positive legacy for the communities we serve.’
Jonathan Evans, the council’s head of highways client and contractual management services said: ‘The LCC Executive unanimously voted in favour of extending the contractual arrangement with Balfour Beatty Living Places by a further six years, ensuring long-term service continuity and allowing both parties to focus on strategic improvements in service delivery.
‘In addition to this, we have secured a number of improvements for the residents of Lincolnshire and I’m excited to work with Balfour Beatty to implement these in the near future.’
BBLP said it will utilise its Operational Control Hub (pictured), which launched this year, to monitor all activities in real time and drive efficiencies across the local road network.
The Hub serves as a platform for teams to promptly address network issues, facilitating real-time digital planning. BBLP said it empowers efficient organisation of both reactive and emergency works, along with streamlined defect reporting in a dynamic digital environment.
It added that the contract will continue to employ a workforce of 183, including 10 apprenticeship and graduate positions.