Site Engineer - West Ham

Plaistow North
1 week ago
Create job alert

Site Engineer – Water Infrastructure

Employment Type: Permanent

Hours: Full-time (45 hours per week)

Location: Regional projects (initial focus: East London)

Role Overview

An established civil engineering contractor operating within the UK water sector is seeking a Site Engineer to support the delivery of complex water infrastructure and utility schemes.

The role will involve working on major water asset remediation projects, including structures, pipelines, and associated civil works within constrained environments such as rail and highway interfaces. Projects are currently in the design phase, offering the opportunity to be involved from early-stage planning through to construction and handover.

You will work closely with Site Agents, Sub Agents and engineers to ensure safe, high-quality and efficient delivery, while gaining exposure to programme, cost and contract management within a regulated water environment.

Key Responsibilities

Health, Safety & Environment

Promote a strong safety culture aligned with water industry standards

Ensure compliance with H&S legislation, permits and environmental controls

Support safe delivery of works around live water assets

Quality & Compliance

Deliver works in line with water industry specifications and quality standards

Ensure defect-free delivery and accurate completion of quality records

Identify value engineering opportunities while maintaining asset integrity

Site Engineering

Establish and maintain survey and level control

Set out works in accordance with drawings, specifications and permits

Carry out regular checks and resolve technical issues on site

Maintain accurate site records, diaries, allocation sheets and photo logs

Assist with RAMS, ITPs, permits and task briefings

Support short-term planning and two-week lookaheads

Liaise with procurement to ensure materials and plant availability

Assist with pre-construction reviews and stakeholder requirements

Support identification and notification of variations

Key Measures of Success

Accurate and timely setting out

Defect-free handover with complete quality documentation

Accurate site records and weekly reporting

Key Relationships

Site Agents and Sub Agents

Engineering and site delivery teams

Client and asset owner technical representatives

Essential Requirements

Previous setting-out experience on water or utility infrastructure projects

Strong understanding of construction methods, H&S and environmental controls

Competent with robotic total stations / EDM equipment

Degree or HNC (or equivalent) in Civil Engineering

Strong communication and coordination skills

Proactive, safety-focused and results-driven approach

Desirable

AutoCAD and Microsoft Office

Temporary Works coordination experience

CSCS card

Cable avoidance and utility detection training

First Aid certification

NEBOSH or IOSH

SMSTS

Benefits

Competitive salary

Pension scheme

Life assurance

Private medical cover

25 days annual leave plus bank holidays and loyalty days

Volunteering allowance

Employee Assistance Programme

Flexible benefits via salary sacrifice

Vehicle or allowance (role dependent)

Ongoing training and development

Career progression opportunities

Long-service awards

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Site Engineer

Site Engineer

Site Engineer

Site Engineer

Site Engineer

Site Engineer

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 to Write a Robotics Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Robotics is moving rapidly from research labs into real-world deployment. Across the UK, robots are now used in manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, defence, agriculture, autonomous vehicles and service industries. As adoption accelerates, demand for skilled robotics professionals continues to grow. Yet many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Robotics job adverts often receive either very few applications or large numbers of unsuitable ones. Experienced robotics engineers, meanwhile, routinely skip adverts that feel vague, unrealistic or disconnected from how robotics systems actually work in practice. In most cases, the problem is not the talent pool — it is the job advert itself. Robotics professionals are systems thinkers. They care deeply about constraints, integration and real-world performance. A poorly written job ad signals weak technical understanding and unrealistic expectations. A well-written one signals credibility, seriousness and a mature robotics programme. This guide explains how to write a robotics job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and positions your organisation as a credible employer in the robotics sector.

Maths for Robotics Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are applying for robotics jobs in the UK it is easy to assume you need degree level maths across everything. Most roles do not work like that. What hiring managers usually mean by “strong maths” is much more practical: you can move confidently between coordinate frames you understand rotations without getting lost you can reason about kinematics, control, uncertainty & optimisation you can turn that maths into working code in a robotics stack This guide focuses on the only maths topics that consistently show up across common UK roles like Robotics Software Engineer, Controls Engineer, Autonomous Systems Engineer, Perception Engineer, SLAM Engineer, Robotics Research Engineer, Mechatronics Engineer & Robotics Systems Engineer. You will also get a 6 week learning plan, portfolio projects & a resources section so you can learn fast without drowning in theory.

Neurodiversity in Robotics Careers: Turning Different Thinking into a Superpower

Robotics is where software, hardware & the physical world collide. From warehouse automation & surgical robots to drones, cobots & autonomous vehicles, robots must sense, think & act reliably in messy real environments. To build that kind of technology, you need people who think differently. If you live with ADHD, autism or dyslexia, you may have been told your brain is “too distracted”, “too literal” or “too chaotic” for engineering. In reality, many traits that made school or traditional offices hard are exactly what robotics teams need: intense focus on complex systems, pattern-spotting in sensor data, creative problem-solving when hardware misbehaves. This guide is written for neurodivergent job seekers exploring robotics careers in the UK. We’ll cover: What neurodiversity means in a robotics context How ADHD, autism & dyslexia strengths map to key robotics roles Practical workplace adjustments you can ask for under UK law How to talk about your neurodivergence in applications & interviews By the end, you’ll have a clearer sense of where you might thrive in robotics – & how to turn “different thinking” into a professional superpower.