Sizewell C A12 roundabouts: design and traffic notes for project engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on New Civil Engineer
30 Second Briefing
Two major roundabouts have opened on the A12 in East Suffolk to serve the Sizewell C nuclear power station construction site, which is expected to host almost 8,000 workers at peak. The junctions are designed to handle high volumes of HGV and workforce traffic accessing the coastal site, reducing reliance on smaller local roads. For civil and geotechnical teams, the works signal substantial highway interface, pavement design and traffic management demands over the multi-year construction period.
Technical Brief
- Geometry and lane arrangements must accommodate abnormal indivisible loads for nuclear components, not just standard HGVs.
- Pavement design will need to tolerate sustained construction-phase trafficking before transitioning to long-term public highway duty.
- Tie-ins to the existing A12 require careful staging to maintain live traffic and minimise temporary safety risks.
- Drainage and runoff control at the new junctions are critical to prevent spray, aquaplaning and winter skidding incidents.
- Road safety audits under UK DMRB / GG 119 processes will be central to validating junction layout and signing.
- Construction traffic management plans now pivot around the new junctions, reducing reliance on ad hoc local road controls.
- Lessons on segregating nuclear-site freight and public traffic flows are directly transferable to other UK megaprojects.
Our Take
In our infrastructure coverage, Sizewell C appears frequently alongside Hinkley Point C as a reference project, signalling that traffic and safety interventions on the A12 in East Suffolk are being treated as nationally significant enabling works rather than routine highway upgrades.
The recent milestone of the first engineering train reaching the Sizewell C nuclear construction site via the upgraded branch line suggests a deliberate split logistics strategy, with rail handling bulk aggregates and the A12 roundabouts likely aimed at safer, higher-frequency workforce and light-vehicle access.
With more than 2,000 workers already on enabling infrastructure and a projected 8,000-strong peak workforce at Sizewell C, improved junction geometry on the A12 is likely a prerequisite for managing construction traffic risk and maintaining community acceptance in East Suffolk over the long build-out period.
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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