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Home News Hanson upgrade proposals for Victoria Deep Water Terminal

Hanson upgrade proposals for Victoria Deep Water Terminal

by Staff Writer
March 15, 2017
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Construction materials supplier Hanson is planning to invest £12 million (€13.7 million) at its Victoria Deep Water Terminal on the River Thames at Greenwich, South East London to upgrade and improve the site. A planning application has been submitted to the Royal Borough of Greenwich along with a full environmental impact assessment. The Victoria Deep Water Terminal on the north-west side of the Greenwich peninsular off Tunnel Avenue is an important strategic site which is safeguarded as an industrial

Construction materials supplier Hanson is planning to invest £12 million (€13.7 million) at its Victoria Deep Water Terminal on the River Thames at Greenwich, South East London to upgrade and improve the site. A planning application has been submitted to the Royal Borough of Greenwich along with a full environmental impact assessment.

The Victoria Deep Water Terminal on the north-west side of the Greenwich peninsular off Tunnel Avenue is an important strategic site which is safeguarded as an industrial wharf in the London plan and the Greenwich local plan.

Hanson is proposing to replace two existing concrete batching plants with three new ones enclosed within a building. This new building will also house the raw materials for concrete production, principally sand and gravel, currently stored in open bays.

The extensive waste recycling operation operated by a third party will be terminated and the site cleared, eliminating all associated heavy goods vehicle movements. The temporary office buildings and parking areas will also be removed. In addition, the Thames Path, which runs along the wharf front, will be segregated from the site, resurfaced and extended to a width of six metres to allow it to be used safely by both cyclists and pedestrians.

Hanson spokesman David Weeks said: “These changes will provide significant visual, air quality and efficiency improvements and reduce heavy goods traffic by over 100 vehicles a day. They will also allow us to make better use of the river to transport raw materials and finished products.”

He said the new concrete plants would play an important part in the redevelopment of the Greenwich peninsula and also make precast concrete structures for major infrastructure projects in the capital including the Thames Tideway Tunnel, Silvertown Road Tunnel and Crossrail 2.

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