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Digger Man

Digger Man Blog

by Nick Drew  |  Fri 13 Feb 2026

#FlashbackFriday McAlpine's West Country Memories

Taking a look back at some Alfred McAlpine memories with photos from a couple of their projects that took place in Devon and Cornwall in years gone by.

#FlashbackFriday McAlpine's West Country Memories

The men and women that used to work for “Macs” were a special breed, who knew the job inside out, the likes of whom we will probably never see again. This topic got me thinking about once again sharing some old McAlpine photos that were lent to me by long standing plant man Luke Harris. Luke worked on the construction of Roadford Reservoir in the late 1980’s, the job involved a considerable amount of excavation and earthmoving works which was tackled by Alfred McAlpine, who in familiar style amassed a vast amount of kit to assault the job with, including the Caterpillar 245 above, in face in shovel mode.

 The job involved the formation of a large rockfall embankment which would form the dam, which would eventually impound water from the River Wolf to form a reservoir with an impressive net storage capacity of 34,500 megalitres (around 8 billion gallons).

The rock was transferred to the embankment area by a fleet of Caterpillar articulated dumptrucks and pushed out by a Komatsu D155 dozer.

Compacting the rock and stone on the dam embankment itself presented additional problems, but McAlpine’s came up with a solution of using two dozers and a winch system to propel a vibratory roller up and down the face of the dam.

 

I was only lucky enough to work on hire to McAlpine once when a 2 week hire developed into 8 months down on the A30 improvement works in Cornwall. It was long hours and invariably 7 days a week, but I got to work with some proper legends on that job and it was mostly an enjoyable experience.

 

If you wanted a job doing, McAlpines were the boys to get it done, no machines sitting around ticking over all day like we often see on the big jobs these days, if you weren't flat out, you'd be "up the road!"

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