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Hexham Travelodge

Project Summary

Construction of a 69-bed hotel as part of a wider mixed use scheme including retail offerings and a municipal carpark.

The hotel was part of a wider mixed-use scheme including a municipal carpark, superstore and drive-through restaurant.  The brownfield site was technically challenging as it was constrained by Network Rail Boundaries, access difficulties, new highway works, a relic nuclear bunker, listed boundary structures and flooding issues.

Our Approach

Portland was appointed to undertake the full design of the buildings and infrastructure works. the hotel building was designed with a light gauge steel (LGS) frame on a raft foundation placed on stabilised ground. The building was carefully positioned to maintain access routes during flood events when the adjacent municipal carpark was allowed to flood in extreme events.

The project comprised the reclamation of a brownfield site that had previously housed a food cold store that was subsequently converted into a nuclear bunker. A 30,000ft2 retail food store, drive-through restaurant and hotel were constructed, along with a 170 space municipal carpark to serve the adjacent town centre and significant highway improvements. A number of construction techniques were utilised across the development with the hotel being constructed in light gauge steel (LGS). Earthworks were designed to utilise cement and lime stabilisation to reduce the import of stone, minimising off-site vehicle movements and the need for quarried materials, enhancing sustainability.

The relic structures of the nuclear bunker required investigation and Portland prescribed investigation works to de-risk the project and allow the requisite backfilling and ground improvements to be specified. In order to minimise the risk of settlement of the backfilled basement areas, fill utilising cement/lime stabilisation was devised.

The site suffered from a risk of flooding due to overland flows originating from higher land. In order to satisfy the Environment Agency and the LLFA the potential volume of water was estimated by Portland and an above ground reservoir facility designed into the carpark levels scheme to ensure that the overland floods could be incorporated without increasing risk off-site.

A complicated S278 process was navigated by Portland by detailed negotiations with the adopting authority in order to deliver significant improvements to the existing overcapacity at the site entrance.

Image credit: Andrew Heptinstall Photography

 

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