M1 Smart Motorway Scheme – United Kingdom

LinkedIn logoTwitter LogoFacebook logo

SmartSensor HD’s true high definition radar is one component in a comprehensive system designed to ease congestion and manage traffic flow on one of England’s busiest motorways.

Posted on
March 30, 2021

Project Team

Highways England; Costain (main contractor); Mway Communications Ltd. (equipment installation/commission).

Project Scope  

To implement a smart motorway scheme on the M1 between junctions 28 and 31, near the towns of Mansfield, Chesterfield and Worksop.  The M1 scheme covers 20 miles and was implemented at a total cost of £205.8 million (US $288.65 million).  

Problems and Challenges

The M1 is a major strategic route.  The area between junctions 28 and 31 sees approximately 100,000 vehicles per day and congestion is already a serious problem.  Studies indicated congestion would continually increase over the next 15 to 20 years.  Highways England announced the smart motorway project in 2012 as a way to help reduce current congestion levels and to manage future traffic growth.

Solution

Highways England is implementing smart motorway schemes throughout the United Kingdom.  These schemes employ a number of strategies to improve traffic conditions, including but not limited to:

  • All-lanes running schemes which convert hard shoulders into permanent traffic lanes;
  • Emergency pullout areas for drivers to use in case of accident or vehicle malfunction in lieu of a hard shoulder;
  • Overhead signs which display variable speed limits;
  • Information signs that advise drivers of road conditions and lane closures;
  • Detection technologies, including SmartSensor HD, to monitor traffic and provide important speed data.  Currently, more than 60 HD sensors have been installed between junctions 28 and 31.

Benefits

On all smart motorway schemes, Highways England has reported significant improvements to the flow of traffic and journey times.  Recent analysis of traffic data has found an overall reduction in congestion and a 10 percent reduction in vehicle emissions due to improved traffic flow.  Journey time reliability has improved by 22 percent, and personal injury accidents have been reduced by as much as 55.7 percent.

On the M1, data from the Derbyshire Constabulary shows officers have responded to fewer accidents since the smart motorway was installed.  In the year before the smart motorway, officers responded to 124 collisions between junctions 28 and 31; in the year after, only 52 crashes were reported.  From March to December 2017, officers responded to only 20 collisions.