The new method being trialled by Highways England has led to over 1,100 tonnes of road surface being laid in one night – four times higher than average. 

A single crew from contractors Balfour Beatty Mott MacDonald carried out the work on a two-mile stretch of the M6 between junctions 28 and 27 near Leyland last month. A total of 13,200 square metres of tarmac was laid in a single night.

The project involved 25 workers over two nights, with all of the preparation work taking place on a Friday night including planing off the existing road surface and repairing deep cracks and potholes.

A lane closure was kept in place during the day on the Saturday to protect the unfinished road surface and meant crews could focus entirely on laying the new 50mm deep tarmac on the Saturday night. 

The normal method of working would have required workers to be out on the motorway for seven nights to allow small sections of the carriageway to be repaired and resurfaced each night. 

John Lyssejko, project manager at Highways England, said: “We’re keen to do things differently, maintain high standards and reduce the impact on drivers and this new method of working ticks every box. 

“Now we know how well it works, and we are confident that we can maintain safety, we can start to look to use the method elsewhere on the network. 

“We will continue to challenge how we plan and carry out resurfacing work so we can keep disruption to a minimum and ensure drivers can benefit from safer and smoother journeys in the future.” 

The new way of working meant all of the work could be completed over two nights, with no safety incidents recorded. All road markings, reflective road studs and traffic level detectors in the road surface were also replaced. 

The crew laid an average of 163.7 tonnes of road surface every hour with a total of 1146.3 tonnes laid during the Saturday night shift.