Senior Project Manager – Sewage Treatment Works

Slough
2 weeks ago
Create job alert

Senior Project Manager – Sewage Treatment Works
Reports to: Project Director
Project: Slough - Extension of an operational sewage treatment plant (STW)
Location: First year in Central London, then in Slough.
Role Summary
We are seeking an experienced Senior Project Manager with a strong background in water/wastewater infrastructure to lead the extension of a live sewage treatment works that must maintain full operations throughout construction.
The candidate will own end-to-end delivery (scope, programme, budget, quality, safety, environmental compliance) while ensuring a seamless coordination with Thames Water’s operational team, strict adherence to Thames Water procedures and standards, and effective management of multidisciplinary engineering and delivery teams (civil, mechanical, electrical, chemical/process).
Key Responsibilities:

  • Lead the full project lifecycle from project initiation, design coordination, procurement, construction, commissioning, to handover/closeout.
  • Plan and sequence the works to ensure a full coordination with the existing treatment processes, avoiding any unplanned outages, including a meticulously management of the isolations and live interfaces.
  • Establish and maintain the Project Execution Plan, programme, cost plan, risk register, and change control in line with client and internal governance.
  • Serve as the primary point of contact for Thames Water and their operational representatives; chair progress, risk, and interface meetings.
  • Coordinate permits, isolation plans, and method approvals with the Thames Water operational team to safeguard continuity of service and compliance with permit-to-work systems.
  • Manage regulatory, statutory, and third-party stakeholders (e.g., local authorities, EA interfaces, utilities).
  • Champion a safety-first culture; ensure compliance with CDM Regulations, RAMS, LOTO, confined space controls, temporary works, lifting operations, and process safety protocols.
  • Ensure robust environmental management: pollution prevention, odour control, sludge handling, silt and noise/dust management, and wastewater discharge compliance.
  • Oversee quality assurance/quality control, ITPs, and documentation to meet client acceptance criteria.
  • Coordinate civil, structural, mechanical, electrical, instrumentation & control, and process/chemical engineering inputs; ensure design constructability and operability.
  • Oversee integration of M/&E plant, MCCs, SCADA/telemetry, and process tie-ins with live assets, plan staged commissioning and performance testing.
  • Own cost performance: forecasting, earned value, change management, early warnings, and contract administration (e.g., NEC forms).
  • Lead procurement of subcontractors, OEMs, and long-lead items; manage supplier performance and technical submittals.
  • Maintain a realistic, risk-adjusted programme; implement recovery plans as needed.
  • Lead commissioning strategy and phased cutovers; ensure robust testing, O&M documentation, training, spares, asset tagging, and clean handover aligned to Thames Water requirements.
  • Manage and mentor the project team; allocate resources effectively across planning, engineering, commercial, and site delivery functions.
  • Drive high-performance collaboration, clear communications, and proactive issue resolution.
    Qualification, skills and experience:
  • Degree in Engineering (Civil, Mechanical, Electrical, Chemical/Process, or related discipline).
  • Experience delivering water/wastewater infrastructure projects (treatment works, networks, or major AMP frameworks).
  • Demonstrable experience delivering construction projects on live/operational sewage treatment plants without service interruption.
  • In-depth knowledge of Thames Water procedures, standards, and permit-to-work systems (e.g., isolations, method approvals, operational interfaces, documentation and assurance expectations).
  • Proven track record managing multidisciplinary teams (civil, mechanical, electrical, chemical/process) through design, construction, commissioning, and handover.
  • Strong H&S leadership with excellent command of CDM Regulations, RAMS, temporary works, and process safety in water environments.
  • Solid commercial acumen (NEC contract administration, cost control, risk/change management).
  • Excellent stakeholder management, written and verbal communication, and meeting leadership skills.
  • IOSH/NEBOSH or equivalent H&S qualification; Temporary Works Supervisor/Coordinator experience (desirable).
  • Confined Space appreciation/awareness; LOTO and electrical isolation familiarity in live MCC/controls environments (desirable).
  • Experience with SCADA integration, telemetry, OEM process packages, and staged commissioning on live assets (desirable).
  • Familiarity with digital delivery tools (BIM, CDEs, Power BI dashboards, document control systems), desirable.
  • CSCS (Manager/Professional) or equivalent and SMSTS.
    Please note that this job description does not represent a comprehensive list of activities and employees may be requested to undertake other reasonable duties.
    Project description
    The £80 million upgrade of Slough Sewage Treatment Works for Thames Water will be carried out by Ferrovial Construction and Cadagua, working together as a joint venture. This project aims to improve the resilience and sustainability of Slough STW, ensuring it meets tougher Environment Agency standards and achieves better environmental performance. Improvements include expanded treatment capacity, advanced systems for removing ammonia and phosphorus, upgraded storm-flow management, and robust new power infrastructure. The partnership combines Ferrovial Construction’s expertise in UK infrastructure projects with Cadagua’s broad experience in international water treatment.
    Seize the challenge. Move the world together! Innovative, creative, respectful, and diverse are some of the ways we describe ourselves. We are motivated by challenges, and we collaborate across our business units to move the world together. Your journey to a fulfilling career starts here!
    Ferrovial is an equal opportunity employer. We treat all jobs applications equally, regardless of gender, color, race, ethnicity, religion, national origin, age, disability, pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, covered veteran status or protected genetic information (each, a “Protected Class”), or any other protected class in accordance with applicable laws.
    #WeAreFerrovial

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Senior Project Manager - Aerospace and Defence

Senior Project Engineer

Supply Chain Project Manager

Senior Manager AI & Automation

Group IT Manager (Infrastructure)

Project Controls Analyst

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How Many Space Industry Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a UK Space Job?

If you’re pursuing a career in the space industry — whether that’s spacecraft engineering, mission operations, space software, satellite systems, ground segment integration or space data analytics — it’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the sheer number of tools, platforms and technologies mentioned in job adverts. One role wants experience with CAD and FEA software. Another asks for experience with GNSS simulation. A third mentions mission scheduling tools, RF link analysis suites, Python, C++, continuous integration — and it seems there’s always another acronym to learn. With so much listed, many candidates fall into the trap of thinking they must master every tool under the sun before they’ll be taken seriously. Here’s the honest truth most UK space hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you’ve heard of every tool — they hire you because you can apply the right tools to solve real space problems, explain your reasoning clearly, and deliver results. Tools matter, but they always serve a purpose: achieving mission goals, improving reliability, reducing risk, delivering data, or enabling collaboration. Tools are enablers — not trophies. So how many tools do you actually need to know to get a space job? The answer is much fewer and far more strategic than you might think. This article breaks down: what tools employers really expect which ones are core across most space roles which ones are role-specific how to present your tool proficiency on your CV and in interviews

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Space Sector Job Applications (UK Guide)

The space industry is one of the most exciting and multidisciplinary sectors in technology and engineering today. Whether you’re applying for roles in spacecraft design, aerospace systems, robotics, satellite communications, mission operations, payload engineering, space software, ground systems, or scientific research, your application must quickly show hiring managers that you are relevant, technically credible and ready to deliver. In the UK space jobs market — spanning organisations from startups to defence primes, agencies, research labs and commercial constellations — hiring managers do not read every word of your CV. They scan applications rapidly, often making a judgement about whether to read further within the first 10–20 seconds. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in space sector applications, how they assess CVs and portfolios, why specific signals matter, and how you can position your experience to stand out on www.ukspacejobs.co.uk .

The Skills Gap in UK Space Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

The UK space sector is one of the most exciting and fastest-growing high-tech industries in the world. From Earth observation and satellite communications to space robotics, launch systems and deep-space exploration, the breadth of opportunity is enormous. The UK Government’s ambition to capture a significant share of the global space economy has driven investment, policy support and a wave of innovative companies — both established and start-up. Yet despite strong academic programmes and a pipeline of graduates with relevant degrees, employers in the UK space sector consistently report a persistent problem: Many graduates are not prepared for real-world space industry jobs. This is not a matter of intelligence or motivation. Rather, it reflects a growing skills gap between what universities are teaching and what employers actually need from space professionals. In this article, we’ll explore why that gap exists, what universities are doing well, where they fall short, what employers want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build thriving careers in the UK space sector.