Eden Brows

Along a historically important railway line in Cumbria, UK, above the River Eden, a historical landslide from the time the line was constructed in the 1800’s was reactivated following intense rainfall of Storm Desmond that winter.

The relic landslip triggered significant movement of the southbound line. The scale of the movement resulted in closure of the line for some 14 months while AECOM undertook desk study, ground investigation and ground modelling, and explored and agreed options for a detailed design solution to reinstate the railway corridor to operations and stabilise the 500,000 tonnes of landslide mass.

Detailed design included the an in-corridor structural solution comprising the installation of an anchored contiguous bored pile retaining wall. Works started by excavating the top 4 m of embankment to create a safe working platform for installation of circa one hundred 20m deep steel cased, reinforced concrete, bored piles adjacent to the failing railway at the crest of the slope, and a corresponding set of 18m log anchor piles in stable rock on the far side of rail corridor. The two lines of piles were connected with a 1m thick reinforced concrete slab, with a 3 m high retaining wall to allow the track and drainage to be reinstated.

The in-corridor solution allowed the safe operation of trains in the event of continued landslide movement and the line was re-opened with the iconic Flying Scotsman returning to the line with a special excursion in March 2017.

The next phase of design focussed on the stabilisation of the landslide mass below the corridor and above the River Eden. This work addressed the loss of landslide toe at the riverbanks and controlled groundwater levels within the landslide mass. Riverbanks were reinstated with rockfill and rip-rap protection to reprofile the toe and counterfort drainage and horizontally bored raking drains were used to manage the groundwater within the landslide.

Since construction the line has remained safe and open and the landslide movement has reduced to small values likely resulting from the mass settling down to a new equilibrium. Monitoring is ongoing and the project has been nominated for several awards.

Low Level Waste Repository

UK Nuclear Waste Management Ltd, an AECOM-led consortium, operates the United Kingdom’s national low level and intermediate waste repository in northern England. The facility is one of 19 sites owned by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA). The scope of work focuses on managing the national Low Level Waste Repository, maintaining its future capacity, and overseeing the UK National Low Level Waste Programme to ensure that lower activity waste is managed effectively. In addition, the British government has tasked AECOM and its partners to develop a UK-wide low-level waste strategy.

The safe disposal of waste is a vital part of any industrial or decommissioning process. AECOM ensures that low level radioactive waste generated in the UK is disposed of in a way that protects people and the environment. Established in 1959, the site has safely disposed of the nation’s low level waste for more than 50 years. The waste is disposed of in engineered concrete vaults and, where possible, the waste is treated, containerized, and grouted before placement in the vault. More than £100 million has been invested in the infrastructure of the site over the past decade to maintain the facility as an important asset for the UK.