Farrans’ £30m Bristol Airport project: phasing and logistics notes for engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
Farrans has secured a £30m contract to deliver a two‑storey terminal infill at Bristol Airport, increasing terminal floor area by about 45% to handle up to 12 million passengers a year and expand to 38 retail and F&B outlets, including 17 new units. The scheme adds a new domestic baggage reclaim carousel with 20% more capacity, extra seating, and upgraded immigration access with new lifts and stairs, all built in a live operational environment. Construction logistics will use insulated hoardings, air‑locked work zones and a temporary Bailey Bridge to move plant from landside to airside, with peak labour of around 150 people.
Technical Brief
- £30m contract awarded to Farrans, now a subsidiary of John Sisk & Son since November 2025.
- Works infill the structural gap between the existing terminal block and departure gates, constraining staging and access.
- Construction must maintain all passenger routes fully open, driving phasing, night working and segregated workfaces.
- Insulated hoardings and air‑locked work zones will control noise, dust and temperature in live areas.
- A temporary Bailey Bridge will provide a modular landside–airside plant crossing, avoiding runway/taxiway possessions.
- Peak on‑site workforce is forecast at ~150, with a strong reliance on local subcontract supply chains.
- Farrans previously delivered the £60m public transport interchange at Bristol Airport, handling ~250 bus/coach movements daily.
- Experience from concurrent aviation projects at Leeds Bradford and Stansted informs logistics, security compliance and stakeholder coordination.
Our Take
With Bristol Airport’s £400m improvement plan and this £30m terminal phase, the scheme now sits at the upper end of regional UK airport capital programmes in our infrastructure database, closer in ambition to recent works at Leeds and Stansted than to typical provincial upgrades.
Farrans’ repeat work for Bristol Airport, alongside its role as an asset delivery partner for Scottish Water, signals a strategic positioning in complex, live-environment infrastructure where phasing and stakeholder management are as critical as pure build cost.
The combination of a 45% floorspace uplift and a 20% increase in baggage capacity suggests that Bristol Airport is designing for peak-demand resilience rather than incremental growth, which will likely drive more stringent construction sequencing and night‑time working constraints for Farrans on this UK site.
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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