Sunderland Echo

Youngsters inspect Gateway progress

- By David Allison david.allison@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @davidallis­on88

Schoolchil­dren have seen first hand how a major new highways project in Sunderland is taking shape.

Nearly 200 children from Dame Dorothy Primary School have now visited the city’s Northern Gateway project.

Works on the gateway began in February this year and they are taking a summer break during July’s Tall Ships Races and the 30th Sunderland Airshow.

The works will then resume and are due for completion later this year.

The gateway will see North Bridge Street and Dame Dorothy Street becoming two-way for all traffic and improving access in and out of the city centre.

Pupils at Dame Dorothy, which is in Dock Street and close to the project, have been visiting the sites near their school and at North Bridge Street.

They were joined by Councillor Debra Waller, the city council’s deputy cabinet member for Environmen­t and Transporta­tion, and Councillor Barry Curran, a St Peter’s ward member and Dame Dorothy School Governor.

Coun Waller said: “By improving our city’s built environmen­t and its transport connection­s we attract more investment and we improve links in and across our community.

“The Northern Gateway is very much part of this commitment to improvemen­ts.

“Work is progressin­g well, it’s been fun meeting the pupils and they’ve all been very interested in hearing and seeing more about the project.”

At school and site visits, council highways engineers have explained constructi­on techniques and the project’s programme of works.

The programme for this week includes demolition and infilling of the Church Street North subway with foam concrete.

Plus, continuing the improvemen­ts to North Bridge Street with new paving and road widening.

The subway will be filled with a total of 500m³ of foam concrete – the equivalent volume of 1.5 million mugs of coffee.

Iain Williamson, headteache­r at Dame Dorothy, said: “Pupils are always very keen to know what is going in the world around them, especially as the highways environmen­t near the school is changing with these works.

“We’ve had good feedback from teachers, all the pupils and everybody has gained an insight and a better understand­ing of engineerin­g and constructi­on techniques.

“I’m fairly certain that we now have more pupils who want to go into constructi­on or engineerin­g.”

The city council’s cabinet backed the gateway’s works programme at its January meeting after the council secured an extra £3.36million of funding through the National Productivi­ty Investment Fund.

This allowed the authority to revise the budget and propose extra features, including more highway resurfacin­g and new paving throughout the North Bridge Street area. The scheme includes: New signalised junction at the Church Street North/ Dame Dorothy Street junction, with new pedestrian crossing facilities;

Road widening on Dame Dorothy Street for two-way traffic. This will also include the constructi­on of a new retaining wall within the grass verge;

New road layout at the North Bridge Street/Dame Dorothy Street junction to allow a right turn on to Dame Dorothy Street ;

Amendments to the Wheatsheaf junction to allow all vehicles to travel southbound on North Bridge Street ;

Changes to the roadmarkin­gs over the Wearmouth Bridge and southern bridgehead roundabout.

 ??  ?? Councillor­s Barry Curran and Debra Waller with project manager Andrew Bruce and Dame Dorothy Primary School pupils.
Councillor­s Barry Curran and Debra Waller with project manager Andrew Bruce and Dame Dorothy Primary School pupils.
 ??  ?? How North Bridge Street northbound will look when the Northern Gateway plan is completed.
How North Bridge Street northbound will look when the Northern Gateway plan is completed.

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