Locale : North America (English)
X
Close
External view of the terminal at night

New life for Heathrow's Terminal 5

As one of the British Airport Authority's first-tier integrated suppliers, we supplied vital services for underground improvements at London Heathrow's Terminal 5.

This complex job has involved working under one of the world’s busiest airports with the challenges of extremely shallow depth and having to pass under existing utilities .

Opportunity

London Heathrow is the seventh busiest airport in the world by total passenger traffic. In 2019, it handled a record 80.8 million passengers.

Heathrow's Terminal 5 was opened in 2008. Its main building is the largest free-standing structure in the UK. In 2018, Terminal 5 handled more than 32 million passengers on 211,000 flights. It was the busiest terminal at London Heathrow by both passenger numbers and flight movements, driving the need for expansion and improvement.

Solution

Mott MacDonald is one of the first-tier integrated suppliers for the British Airports Authority (BAA Ltd.), which operates five British airports. Our underground work has supported the development of Terminal 5 for many years.

Airside Road Tunnel

Heathrow’s Airside Road Tunnel is 0.8 miles (1.3 kilometers) long. It provides road access from Terminals 1, 2 and 3 to Terminal 5, and serves the remote aircraft stands on the western edge of the airport from the central terminal area.

Constructing the tunnel required working under one of the world’s busiest airports, at extremely shallow depth, and having to pass under existing utilities. At one point the tunnel ran only 10 feet (3 meters) above the tunnels for the Heathrow Express rail link.

We were responsible for the design of the twin tunnel bores and the approach structures, along with highway design, mechanical and electrical definition design, and instrumentation and monitoring.

Safety was a big focus of our twin tunnel design. Recognizing the need to provide safe access at all times, the decision was taken to bore twin single carriageway tunnels, ensuring they were wide enough to allow vehicles to pass each another in case of a vehicle breakdown.

A key innovation was the use of the observational method on the tunnel portals. With strong encouragement from BAA, our designers and the contractor Laing O’Rourke achieved substantial time and cost savings in temporary works through close teamwork. The method led to program savings of over 30 weeks and improved site safety by avoiding the need to handle heavy steelwork within confined spaces.

Phase 2 improvements

Phase 2 of the development of Terminal 5 involved the design and construction of a second satellite building and 13 aircraft stands, and an expansion of the baggage and tracked-transit-system housed in tunnels. The satellite building has four levels above ground and three levels of basements up to 59 feet (18 meters) below ground.

Stage one of Phase 2 included all the works below ground as well as the apron slab and three new aircraft stands. Stage two delivered the remaining aircraft stands and above-ground building works for live operation. The two-stage design and construction process created unique challenges and required careful planning, coordination, and design integration.

Beginning at the feasibility stage, our responsibilities included the design of deep basements and a number of cut-and-cover tunnels. We incorporated a deep level chamber in the design that could be used in the future to launch a tunnel boring machine to construct a baggage tunnel to the central terminal. We developed the monitoring strategy and provided construction support.

Outcome

The Airside Road Tunnel, driven by a dual-mode tunnel boring machine, was completed on time, below budget, and with no impact on the airport’s day-to-day operations. Trains on the Heathrow Express operated as normal and all associated work for monitoring was undertaken within the normal maintenance closures.

For the sub-surface works in the Phase 2 improvements, the biggest challenge was the presence of four rail tunnels, three shafts, and three cross-passages.

Our detailed geotechnical analysis modeled the behavior of the rail tunnels and communicated the impact of the basement design and construction. We worked within strict limits to ensure that tunnel displacements, gradients, distortions, and change in lining loads met with specified guidelines.

expand-image mail-envelope icon-icon-linkedin-mmdv-green icon-close arrow-left icon-section icon-section-white arrow-down icon-arrow-down-sml icon-arrow-left-lrg icon-arrow-left-sml icon-arrow-right-lrg icon-arrow-right-sml icon-arrow-up-sml icon-champions icon-section icon-section-white icon-download icon-education icon-email icon-grid-view icon-language icon-link-to icon-list-view icon-location icon-login-register ec-icon-login-register icon-ec-apply-arrow icon-ar-apply-arrow icon-mm-icon-search-ec icon-minus icon-more icon-phone icon-plus icon-recently-viewed icon-search icon hash key-facts-corner-sash quote-underline social-icon-facebook social-icon-googleplus social-icon-linkedin social-icon-twitter social-share-icon-facebook social-share-icon-facebook social-share-icon-googleplus social-share-icon-googleplus social-share-icon-instagram social-share-icon-instagram social-share-icon-linkedin social-share-icon-linkedin social-share-icon-twitter social-share-icon-twitter social-share-icon-youtube social-share-icon-youtube sina-weibo MM-Shape01-Quote-Views MM-Shape03-Quote-Locations MM-Shape05-Quote-Projects MM-Shape12-Quote-Sectors MM-Shape13-Quote-Expertise MM-Shape14-Quote-About-Us MM-Shape14-Quote-Careers checkmark icon-expand-view icon-apply-now menu linkedin-mmdv-green icon-ad-close mail-mmdv-green icon-ad-menu menu-close ec-menu-close sphere icon-cookies icon-legal icon-registered-companies target rotate-screen video-replay-flat video-replay audio-mute audio-play
×
Mott MacDonald main logo

Would you like to hear more from us?

Sign up to receive notifications