The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Residents welcome level crossing works Safety measures: Upgrades include traffic lights and barriers

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Work on a second new level crossing for Dingwall started this week as residents welcomed the long-awaited project.

Engineers from Network Rail are upgrading both of Dingwall’s middle and number one crossings to full barriers, in a bid to improve safety for motorists, pedestrian­s and train passengers.

The middle crossing, located just yards from Dingwall Academy on Newton Road, has traditiona­lly been protected by one single barrier; while number one on Craig Road has remained an open crossing with no barriers.

As part of the £3.5 million works, both will now be equipped with traffic lights, two single lane barriers on each side and an object detection system which scans the line to check it’s clear for approachin­g trains.

As the middle crossing opened to drivers yesterday, Dingwall and Seaforth Councillor Margaret Paterson welcomed the works and stressed “safety is paramount”.

She said: “It’s absolutely crucial. I have been asking for gates on these crossings for over 20 years and they put on the half barriers which helped quite a bit.

“Hundreds and hundreds of vehicles go through these

“I’ve been asking for gates on these crossings for over 20 years”

crossings, not counting the pedestrian­s including children. The secondary school has over 1,000 pupils and lies right next to the middle crossing.

“The lights have failed on a number of occasions. There weren’t any lights, so people weren’t aware the train was coming.

“When that happened on occasions, people just drove over and the next thing a train was coming.

“The fright you get stays with you for a long time; it’s really scary for the driver of the train as well as the people sitting on the train.

“The lights are not safe; we need to have the gates. There was a fatality which is so distressin­g. It leaves heartache for years for the family and friends for the person so it’s not before time to take these steps.” The works have been conducted following a series of close calls and trespassin­g incidents on both areas of the line.

The Craig Road crossing will now remain closed until 5am until November 26 to enable the essential works to be undertaken.

David Dickson, infrastruc­ture director, said consultati­on work with the local community indicated support for the improvemen­ts and added: “These level crossing upgrades represent a significan­t improvemen­t for rail and road safety in Dingwall.”

 ?? Photograph by Sandy McCook. ?? CRUCIAL: Highland councillor Margaret Paterson at the Dingwall Central level crossing.
Photograph by Sandy McCook. CRUCIAL: Highland councillor Margaret Paterson at the Dingwall Central level crossing.

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