North Tees Nature Park: rewilding the Tees Estuary

United Kingdom

Filter projects by:

Market

  • Cities

    Cities EMIA

  • Commercial & Residential

    Mixed Use

    Office

    Residential

    Retail

  • Education

    Colleges & Universities

    Schools

  • Energy

    Carbon capture, utilization and storage

    Geothermal

    Grid modernization

    Hydroelectricity

    Hydrogen

    Microgrids and energy storage

    Offshore wind

    Portfolio Decarbonization and Climate Resilience

    Solar

    Transportation decarbonization

  • Healthcare

    Clinical Hospital

    Life Sciences

    Senior Living

  • Industrial

    Agriculture, Food & Beverage

    Automotive & Heavy Equipment & Machinery

    Digital Infrastructure

    High Performance Logistics

    Manufacturing

    Mining & Metals

    Pharmaceutical/Specialty Chemicals

    Pulp & Paper

  • Justice

  • Leisure

    Arts and Culture

    Hotels and Resorts

    Themed Entertainment and Mixed-Use

  • National Governments

    Civil Works

    Disaster Resilience

    Environment

    Infrastructure & Facilities

    International Development

  • Oil, Gas & Chemicals

    Chemical/Petrochemical

    Downstream

    Midstream

    Upstream

  • Sports and Venues

    Collegiate

    Convention Centers

    Olympics & Mega-Events

    Stadiums & Arenas

  • Transportation

    Air Cargo

    Aviation

    Bridges

    Connected and Autonomous Vehicles

    Freight Rail

    Highways & Roads

    Light Rail

    Mass Transit

    Ports & Marine

    Transportation decarbonization

    Tunnels

  • Water

    Dams & Hydropower

    Flood and coastal resilience

    Industrial Water

    Tunnels, Conveyance, Collection & Distribution

    Wastewater Treatment & Reuse

    Water Treatment

    Watershed and Ecosystem Management

Service

  • Alternative Delivery Models

  • Architecture and Design

    Architecture

    Asset Advisory

    Climate Adaptation

    Community Engagement

    Interior Architecture

    Landscape Architecture

    Planning

    Urban Analytics

    Urban Design

    Urbanism + Planning

  • Asset Management

  • Cities Solutions

  • Construction Management

  • Converged Resilience

  • Cost Management

  • Digital Infrastructure Services

  • Economics

  • Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing Solutions

  • Engineering

    Ground Engineering

  • Environmental Services

    Air Quality Consulting and Engineering

    Climate Adaptation

    EHS Management Consulting and Compliance

    Environmental and Social Impact Assessment and Permitting

    Environmental Contracting

    Management Information Systems (MIS)

    Remediation, Restoration and Redevelopment

  • Finance

  • Industrial and Commercial Operations and Maintenance

  • IT and Cybersecurity

  • Mobilitics

  • Multinational Investment and Development

  • Pedestrian Modelling (North America)

  • Planning and Consulting

    Geospatial Services

    Pedestrian Modelling

  • Process Development & Implementation

  • Program Management

  • Public-Private Partnerships

  • Risk Management & Resilience

    Critical Infrastructure Protection

  • Simulation Models

    Rail Simulations

  • Strategic consulting

    People + Place Advisory

  • Tunnels, Trenchless Technology and Underground Infrastructure

  • Vertical Transportation Services (North America)

  • Visualization and Virtual Reality

Location

  • Africa

  • Algeria

  • Antarctica

  • Australia

  • Azerbaijan

  • Bahrain

  • Bangladesh

  • Belgium

  • Bolivia

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Brazil

  • British West Indies

  • Canada

  • Caribbean-Puerto Rico

  • China

  • Colombia

  • Croatia

  • Czech Republic

  • Egypt

  • Eritrea

  • Finland

  • France

  • Germany

  • Greece

  • Greenland

  • Haiti

  • Hong Kong

  • India

  • Indonesia

  • Iraq

  • Ireland

  • Italy

  • Japan

  • Kenya

  • Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

  • Kuwait

  • Liberia

  • Lithuania

  • Malaysia

  • Maldives

  • Mali

  • Malta

  • Mauritania

  • Mexico

  • Monaco

  • Mongolia

  • Montenegro

  • Myanmar

  • Netherlands

  • New Zealand | Aotearoa

  • Norway

  • Oman

  • Panama

  • Papua New Guinea

  • Peru

  • Philippines

  • Poland

  • Portugal

  • Qatar

  • Romania

  • Singapore

  • Slovakia

  • South Africa

  • South Korea

  • Spain

  • Sri Lanka

  • Sweden

  • Switzerland

  • Taiwan

  • Turkey

  • Ukraine

  • United Arab Emirates

  • United Kingdom

  • United States

  • Vietnam

  • Worldwide

Discover how we are helping the Environment Agency restore an intertidal habitat in one of the UK’s industrial heartlands.

Situated in North East England, the River Tees Estuary is one of the most heavily modified and developed estuaries in the UK.  

Since the mid-1800s, industries like mining and steel have been heavily concentrated along its banks. While crucial to the economy, this industrialisation has taken a devastating toll. Today, less than 10 percent of the estuary’s original intertidal habitat remains, causing a substantial decline of some species

Partnering with the Environment Agency, we’re developing an outline business case for the North Tees Nature Park to revive these essential habitats.  

This project is part of the Environment Agency’s £30 million Tees Tidelands programme, which aims to ‘realign, restore and reconnect intertidal habitats and species’. 

Our role involves advising on the best approach to transform a steep slag bank on the estuary edge into a new intertidal terrace suitable for saltmarsh habitat. 

Recreating intertidal habitats: a crucial part of the local ecosystem 

Saltmarsh plays a vital role in the Tees Estuary ecosystem by filtering out pollutants from the water, providing nursery and refuge areas for bird and fish species, and supporting biodiversity. It can also strengthen flood resilience. 

Despite being scarce around the UK, the Tees has one of the few patches of saltmarsh within the North East of England. Yet due to intense industrialisation, significant areas of it have been transformed into freshwater grazing marshes – making it difficult for certain species that depend on these habitats (such as wading birds) to survive. 

The North Tees Nature Park seeks to address this problem by lowering the ground within the land boundary to reconnect it with the Tees’ natural tide cycles. This will not only enable once-abundant species to thrive again but will also create a healthier, safer estuarine environment. 

A view of the Tees Estuary, where the North Tees Nature Park is situated.

Assessing contaminated land 

Until the 1970s, the land that would have formed part of the natural estuary was reclaimed to build industrial sites – and soon became filled with slag (a by-product of smelting) and other wastes.  

In 1970, Redcar Council reported that more than 500 tonnes of industrial waste was deposited into the River Tees each year. This is why conducting a thorough ground investigation to assess soil conditions and the composition of the material to be removed was crucial.  

Spanning one kilometre long and 30 metres wide, the designated land sits next to the Augean Port Clarence landfill site and is currently owned by the Teesside Environmental Trust.  

Given the likely contamination and high removal costs of slag waste, the Teesside Environmental Trust is exploring the possibility of selling the material for reuse. Therefore, we included specific testing in our ground investigation to see if this is feasible. If it is, it could significantly reduce project costs. 

Creating a sustainable legacy for the Tees Estuary 

To establish a baseline of the existing biodiversity, our specialists carried out terrestrial and intertidal habitat surveys.  

Using this data, we can compare the current terrestrial biodiversity with the potential intertidal biodiversity gained by lowering the land.  

We also studied the potential effects on water quality within the River Tees, as well as impacts on landscape, cultural heritage, archaeology, and local flora and fauna. 

Once complete, the North Tees Nature Park will not only restore these critical habitats, creating a vibrant, biodiverse ecosystem, but it will also reconnect the Teesside communities with their estuary – a connection gradually lost over the past two centuries.