BAM was narrowly beaten into second place in the league, which is produced by Builders’ Conference and published in the July issue of º£½ÇÉçÇøapp magazine.
The league counts only those contracts formally signed during the month, not selection as preferred bidder.
Carillion’s contract from , valued at £429m in total, accounted for the bulk of its £449m-worth of contract wins.
BAM took second place with 16 contracts worth a total value of £424m. The largest is the £300m contract to build Google’s London headquarters in King’s Cross.
In third place was Balfour Beatty, with 10 contracts totalling £280.4m. The biggest of these is a £120m contract from Essex County Council for a waste treatment facility in Basildon.
Interserve took fourth position with five contracts worth £209.3m.Â
These top four accounted for nearly half of all the work won in June.
While May saw the total value of contract awards break through the £3bn barrier (£3.36bn), June’s total fell back to £2.8bn.
For the year-to-date, Morgan Sindall remains top of the pile, with £1,839m of new work won in the past 12 months.
Carillion now moves into second place, with £1,667m of orders. But while Morgan Sindall’s workload comes from 151 contracts, Carillion’s comes from just 14, suggesting a higher-risk, higher-reward approach to business.
In third place in the year-to-date table is Vinci Construction on £1,614m. Laing O’Rourke, BAM and Balfour Beatty follow on, all with more than £1bn of work booked since July 2012.
The full Contracts League tables, together with analysis, can be seen in the July issue of º£½ÇÉçÇøapp magazine. Purchase your own annual subscription for just £35 at
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