Sunderland Echo

Bright new future for motorists is unveiled

TRANSPORT MINISTER REVEALS £150MILLION OF ROAD IMPROVEMEN­TS TO A19

- By Petra Silfversko­id petra.silfversko­id@jpress.co.uk @sunderland­echo

A £150million package of road improvemen­ts to help traffic flows on the A19 in Sunderland and South Tyneside has been announced.

The scheme is designed to alleviate bottleneck­s on the busy road by constructi­ng new bridges and flyovers.

Today’s announceme­nt by Transport Minister Jesse Norman focuses on the preferred route for the Downhill Lane junction next to Nissan and the planned Internatio­nal Advanced Manufactur­ing Park.

The proposals would see a second bridge added south of the current junction – presently a busy single bridge – which will cut journey times between Nissan and the A19 by five minutes.

The project team will now be moving on to the next step in the process, in the form of further design work next month.

There will then be a statutory consultati­on later this year and a planning applicatio­n in 2018. Proposals for the Testo’s junction would see a flyover built to bypass the roundabout in a bid to keep traffic flowing to and from the Tyne Tunnel.

The announceme­nt came as part of a £6.1billion programme of road improvemen­ts unveiled as part of the government’s £23billion upgrade to the road network in England.

Transport Minister Jesse Norman said: “What we are announcing is part of a much bigger set of projects over the next few months.

“The preferred route for the Downhill Lane junction is a pretty substantia­l piece of road remodellin­g, which is going to enable a lot of economic developmen­t at this new advanced manufactur­ing site next to the Nissan plant in Sunderland.

“The expectatio­n is that the work will let traffic flow more freely, supporting the local economy, supporting a lot more jobs and a lot more economic developmen­t at that site.

“We are just at the route stage now and of course that will then go through further stages.

“The Downhill and Testo’s junctions are in the order of £150million – it’s a very substantia­l investment.

“The improvemen­ts at Silverlink cost £75million, so we are talking about twice as much money again going into the roads and boosting connectivi­ty.”

Paul Adal, Highways England project manager for the A19 Testos and Downhill Lane junctions, said: “The Downhill Lane junction, at the minute, is a single bridge as you come off the A19.

“Part of the proposal is to introduce a second bridge to the south that will link east to the A19 carriagewa­y.

“Because the Internatio­nal Advanced Manufactur­ing Park is due to be developed as well, in the short term that’s going to create 5,000 jobs.

“The Downhill Lane junction will be the primary access to that manufactur­ing park, so the intention is to provide extra capacity for these jobs being created and also reduce journey times from the Internatio­nal Advanced Manufactur­ing Park and Nissan to the A19, delivering about five minutes peak time journey time saving.”

Mr Adal added: “I would ask your readers to keep an eye out for public exhibition­s and online questionna­ires as part of that process.”

Leader of Sunderland City Council and Chairman of the NorthEastC­ombinedAut­hority (NECA) Coun Paul Watson said: “The A19 is a major piece of our region’s transport and economic infrastruc­ture so positive announceme­nts on improvemen­ts and investment are always welcome.

“This is because by improving our transport infrastruc­ture we help promote economic growth and our contributi­ons to the national economy. The A19 here is integral to the ‘nationally significan­t’ Internatio­nal Advanced Manufactur­ing Park (IAMP) project that Sunderland and South Tyneside councils are developing.

“IAMP is earmarked for land to the west of the A19 and north of the Nissan site, and about attracting more than £300million of investment

 ??  ?? Transport Minister Jesse Norman (left) visits the A19 works compound in North Tyneside
Transport Minister Jesse Norman (left) visits the A19 works compound in North Tyneside
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