East Riding’s Karl Rourke wins Special Recognition at ADEPT President’s Awards 2026

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The East Riding of Yorkshire Council’s service manager for street lighting, Karl Rourke, has been recognised for his work on reducing the carbon emissions from streetlighting at the Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning & Transport (ADEPT) Spring Conference and President’s Awards.

Held at the Institution of Civil Engineers, One Great George Street in London, Mr Rourke won for his Real Lighting, Right Place, Right Time initiative which has proved that alternatives to traditional lighting, including reflective signage and widespread use of Clearview Intelligence Solar Road Studs can be as effective. The President’s Special Recognition Award celebrates those making a real difference by the way they work and the outcomes they deliver.

The judges said Mr Rourke exemplifies national leadership in street lighting, driving data‑led, low‑carbon, safety‑focused reforms that transform industry standards. Click HERE to listen to him in conversation with Highways News’ Paul Hutton in an episode of the Highways Voices podcast.

The project in East Riding of Yorkshire was also a winner at the Decarbonising Transport Awards in March. It is part of the ADEPT Live Labs 2 project, which has successfully shown how rethinking the way roads are illuminated allows councils to safely remove street lighting, cut carbon emissions and make significant cost savings while maintaining road safety.

Elsewhere, the Environmental Services Team at North Somerset Council were this year’s Team winners, recognising their achievements as the first local authority to collect soft plastics at the kerbside. This UK-first milestone sees the team collect over five tonnes of soft plastics each week, a massive achievement and one the team can be truly proud of. 

Winner of the Delivering Sustainable Growth Award, sponsored by Costain was Northumberland County Council for The Northumberland Line. Judges loved the project, which focusses on returning passenger services to South East Northumberland and highlighted its immense value in providing a step change in public transport connectivity. 

Highly Commended in the same category was Kirklees Council for Our Cultural Heart (Huddersfield Blueprint), a major regeneration driven by the Place Directorate, reshaping Huddersfield with new cultural, leisure and economic assets.

The winner of the Deploying Digital Innovation and Technology award, sponsored by Ringway, was East Riding of Yorkshire Council for its project Beyond Lighting: A Digital Blueprint for Safer, Lower-Carbon Infrastructure. The judges praised the use of digital forecasting and 24/7 AI road safety tools that resulted in 50% carbon emissions reductions and 80% cost savings. The project is transforming streetlighting for communities at a national scale and is one to watch.

Finalists and Highly Commended in the same category were Lincolnshire County Council for Project Groundwater: Greater Lincolnshire’s hyperlocal flood alarm, and Cheshire East Highways – Ringway Jacobs for their project Smart Roads, Safer Networks: Transforming Highways with AI Video Intelligence. 

Project Groundwater involves the deployment of real-time flood monitoring and community collaboration to drive a hyperlocal flood alarm, and Smart Roads, Safer Networks sees Cheshire East Highways use AI video analysis to improve safety, cut costs by 40%, reduce disruption, and deliver fast, accurate road condition data. 

The Shaping Places for People award, sponsored by Jacobs, was won by Hertfordshire County Council for Community Shelters in Hertfordshire. The council is working with local communities to improve bus waiting areas and the space around them through the development of Community Shelters. The project delivers for the community, the council, the environment, adults, children, health and the economy, which the judges admired and commended hugely

City of London’s project Reinventing the City Alley was Highly Commended in the same category. The project is a transformative initiative that delivers new pedestrian routes, forging a more humane, inclusive, resilient City.

Also Highly Commended in this category was Norfolk County Council for Transforming Heartsease Roundabout. The roundabout has delivered major safety upgrades and faster, more reliable travel for those using one of Norwich’s busiest junctions.

Outgoing ADEPT President, Angela Jones said: “The ADEPT Spring Conference and Awards are an excellent opportunity to celebrate outstanding local government projects and people. Those using innovation and connection to deliver services for communities. Doing the vital work of creating safe, sustainable and resilient places.

“Judging the President’s Awards has been one of the highlights of my year. Reading through the entries and seeing the range of them, the ambition, the heart that has gone into them, reminds me just how much brilliance exists within our local authorities. Every entry represents teams and individuals who have gone further than they had to, finding better ways to meet the needs of their communities, even in the face of growing challenges.

“Making the case for people and place has been my theme throughout this year, and the honest truth is that none of it is done alone. Everyone involved in these awards, from those shortlisted to tonight’s winners and highly commended finalists, plays a part in delivering stronger, more connected and more resilient communities.

(Picture: ADEPT)

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