Daily Mail

STONEHENGE TO GET ITS TUNNEL

Controvers­ial project part of Sunak’s £27bn UK roads masterplan

- By Tom Payne Transport Correspond­ent

A TUNNEL could be built under Stonehenge after plans were given the green light as part of a £27billion masterplan to improve the nation’s roads.

For decades, motorists on the A303, which passes the stone circle, have endured severe congestion on the popular route to and from the South West.

Opponents have argued that plans for a 1.8mile (2.9km) tunnel to ease gridlock around the World Heritage Site could ruin the prehistori­c archaeolog­ical surroundin­gs.

But the £1.6billion project has finally been approved after years of controvers­y as part of the biggest road expansion fund since the 1970s. Under plans unveiled in 2017, the tunnel will run as a dual carriagewa­y and will be a further 164ft away from Stonehenge compared to the existing A303 route.

Officials have promised the project will avoid important archaeolog­ical sites and will not spoil the view of the setting sun from Stonehenge during the winter solstice.

The scheme is one of dozens intended to ‘level up’ the regions by improving road links. They have been unveiled as part of a Road Investment Strategy for the next five years.

Mr Sunak told the Commons that the A303 is ‘one of our most important regional arteries’ but has become ‘one of those totemic projects symbolisin­g delay and obstructio­n’.

He said: ‘Government­s have been trying to fix it since the 1980s. Every year, millions of cars crawl along it in traffic, ruining the backdrop to one of our most important historic landmarks.’

English Heritage chief executive Kate Mavor said: ‘We welcome this announceme­nt and thank the Government for its support.

‘ This is an important step towards finally doing justice to Stonehenge – one of the wonders of the world – and the prehistori­c landscape within which it stands.

‘Placing the A303 within a tunnel would transform Stonehenge, reunite the landscape and leave a lasting legacy for future generation­s.’

Steve Gooding, director of the RAC Foundation, said: ‘Since 1991 there have been over 50 different proposals for removing traffic from the Stonehenge site, with the most recent tunnel having been confirmed in 2017. ‘You can certainly hear drivers on the route, and almost the stones themselves, heaving a sigh of relief that the scheme is to go ahead rather than being sent back to the drawing board yet again.’

The £27billion road fund will pay for work on more than 20 connection­s to ports and airports, more than 100 junctions and 4,000 miles (6,437km) of road.

Strategy papers published yesterday make little reference to smart motorways, the controvers­ial roads which are being reviewed amid serious safety concerns.

The document simply states: ‘In 2019, the Department commission­ed an evidence stocktake to gather the facts on the safety of smart motorways and make recommenda­tions.

‘The stocktake is expected to conclude shortly. Highways England will need to deliver its recommenda­tions and assess what they mean for the delivery of enhancemen­t projects involving smart motorways.’ The road expansion and improvemen­t programme is an echo of the ‘roads for prosperity’ scheme unveiled by Margaret Thatcher in 1989 to boost ‘the great car economy’.

The expansion of more than 100 roads is due to start on April 1 and run until March 2025.

However, environmen­tal campaigner­s warned the road-building plans could undermine the government’s drive to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

‘Millions of cars ruin the backdrop’

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