Bristol Post

Highways £9.6m repairs funding for city streets

- Estel FARELL-ROIG estel.farellroig@reachplc.com

BRISTOL City Council has revealed the roads set to be improved in a multi-millionpou­nd scheme.

In a statement, the council said maintenanc­e and repairs of Bristol’s carriagewa­ys, streets, footways and bridges are set to receive a funding boost of £9.6 million.

It added there is currently an estimated backlog that requires investment of £100 million in highway structures.

The council has more than 700 streets on a rolling programme that require repairs, the statement said, and some major refurbishm­ent is needed for highways structures including St Philips Causeway and St Anne’s Bridge.

It said: “Ongoing inspection­s and surveys have identified the carriagewa­ys, streets, footways and bridges that are a priority and in need of urgent repair.

“Potholes and other issues reported by the public have also been taken into account during this prioritisa­tion of works.

“The specific works identified as priorities include improvemen­ts to the footways on Park Street, refurbishm­ent of St Peters Rise, continued repairs to Redcliffe Bridge, repairs to West end and Temple Gate car parks, and safety repairs to some New

Cut bridges.”

Money allocated from the Pothole Action Fund will enable preventati­ve work, such as surface dressing, road surface safety inspection­s, and drainage repairs to address any defects before they cause potholes.

Councillor Don Alexander, cabinet member for transport, said: “Improving the condition of our roads and footways will ensure we are a wellconnec­ted city linking people with education, jobs and services through well maintained and high quality transport connection­s.

“By keeping our highways network well maintained and safe we hope to encourage residents to walk and cycle more which will improve wellbeing, reduce congestion, improve our air quality and deliver carbon reduction targets.

“Earmarking this funding now will enable us to put in place a wellplanne­d programme of early interventi­ons that will increase the resilience of our transport network, reduce disruption and potential elevated costs in the future.”

He added: “The money we have allocated will help us address critical needs but significan­t investment is still needed to address the full challenge associated with the ongoing upkeep of our highways.

“We will continue to raise our concerns with government and work with elected members to bang the drum for Bristol’s roads and highways.”

 ?? Michael LLoyd ?? Park Street is one of the roads earmarked for improvemen­ts
Michael LLoyd Park Street is one of the roads earmarked for improvemen­ts

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom