Manchester Evening News

£4.9m green light for Loop blueprint

- By CHRIS SLATER chris.slater@men-news.co.uk @chrisslate­rMEN

PLANS to transform the Fallowfiel­d Loop and make it more family friendly have been announced.

Council chiefs will spend £4.9 million on improvemen­ts to the offroad walking and cycling route stretching across Manchester.

Improved entry and exit points plus transforme­d open spaces, children’s play areas and seating along the route are among ideas to give people places to stop and relax and make it more attractive for a day out.

Following the route of a former railway line of the same name, the eight mile route from Chorlton in the south west to Fairfield on the border of Openshaw and Audenshaw in the east is believed to be the longest urban cycleway in the country.

Manchester City Council helped pay for the derelict line’s conversion in the late 1990s but the route is mostly owned by charity Sustrans and promoted and maintained by volunteer group the Friends of the Fallowfiel­d Loop.

There have historical­ly been issues with crime and anti-social behaviour along some parts of the route which passes through Fallowfiel­d, Levenshulm­e, Reddish and Gorton.

However town hall chiefs say they want to make it ‘safer, more convenient and accessible’ in a bid to encourage its use.

Plans are not finalised, with the town hall launching a consultati­on and asking people for input before designs are brought forward.

It is the latest stage of improvemen­ts to the Loop, with a new footbridge re-connecting the stretch over Hyde Road in Gorton being officially opened to the public this week. The bridge is part of the £5.9 million scheme to widen the A57 at an infamous bottleneck near Debdale Park in Gorton.

The Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) also announced £3.1 million of funding for pop-up cycle lanes to give people an alternativ­e to public transport during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Executive Member for the Environmen­t, Planning and Transport, Councillor Angeliki Stogia, said:

Loop

“We’re working to bring forward a series of ambitious projects which will significan­tly improve the city’s cycling and walking infrastruc­ture.

“We want to create a more attractive, safer route for people walking or cycling across our city, realising the Loop’s true potential and inspiring more people of all ages and abilities to take up active travel.

“But to do this, we need your ideas and feedback, so please make sure you get involved by taking part in our consultati­on, to help ensure that we design improvemen­ts which work for the whole community.”

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The Fallowfiel­d

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