Thames Water’s £5.7bn Abingdon reservoir: procurement lens for geotechnical teams
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on New Civil Engineer
30 Second Briefing
Thames Water has begun procurement for a £5.7bn design-and-build contract to deliver the proposed Abingdon strategic reservoir in Oxfordshire, covering full design, construction, testing and commissioning under a single main contractor. The utility describes the selection as an “extensive” multi-stage process, signalling a long lead-in for bidders needing capability in large earthworks, major water-retaining structures and complex commissioning. For civil and geotechnical contractors, the scale and integrated scope point to significant opportunities in reservoir embankment design, seepage control and long-term performance monitoring systems.
Technical Brief
- Procurement launch signals early contractor involvement for constructability, phasing and risk allocation on a single package.
- Multi-stage selection process likely to include detailed technical submissions on embankment zoning, cut-off systems and outlet works.
- Bidders will need demonstrable experience with large UK onshore reservoirs under current Environment Agency and Reservoirs Act regimes.
- Integrated testing and commissioning scope implies responsibility for hydraulic performance, leakage acceptance criteria and instrumentation verification.
- Single main contractor model concentrates interface risk between geotechnical works, mechanical/electrical systems and water company operations.
- Long procurement horizon will affect design resource planning, specialist plant allocation and key subcontractor framework agreements.
- For major civils and construction contractors, bid costs will be substantial, favouring joint ventures and established consortia.
- Outcome is likely to influence procurement models for other large-scale strategic water resource schemes across England.
Our Take
Within our 21 Geotechnical stories, few UK schemes approach the scale of the Abingdon reservoir in Oxfordshire, signalling that Thames Water is likely to set benchmark procurement and ground-risk allocation terms for future large water infrastructure in the region.
For a project of this size, geotechnical risk around embankment performance, settlement and seepage control will be central to contractor selection, so bidders can expect extensive requirements for early ground investigation, observational method frameworks and long-term monitoring commitments.
Given the scrutiny on UK water utilities in our recent coverage, Thames Water’s handling of Abingdon’s procurement in Oxfordshire will likely be watched as a test case for how major regulated utilities justify large capital works and demonstrate resilience benefits to regulators and local stakeholders.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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