The Scotsman

Traders get buy-in to help package for Leith tram extension works

- By DAVID BOL david.bol@jpimedia.co.uk

Traders on Edinburgh’s Leith Walk can help shape a £2.4 million package of support ahead of the route undergo - ing 18 months of tram extension disruption.

Explorator­y works have already begun at various points along Leith Walk and Elm Row ahead of the full constructi­on of the £207m tram extension to Newhaven starting by the end of the year.

The works are expected to be completed by the end of 2022 and the extension will then open in the first quarter of 2023 after testing. The work will include Leith Walk being reduced to just one lane of traffic for up to 18 months.

The support package for Leith Walk and Constituti­on Street traders will include a local discount scheme, a business contingenc­y fund, transport hubs, a community fund, a cargo bike hire scheme and an “open for business” campaign to help encourage customers to continue shopping.

The discount scheme could see customers purchasing vouchers online to spend in local stores at a reduced rate. A grant of up £6,000 per business will be available to help eligible small independen­t retailers with short-term cash flow issues during the work.

More than 200 businesses have already completed a survey to help the authority gauge what traders will need during the overhaul.

City transport and environmen­t convener, Councillor Les ley Mac inn es, said :“It’ s clearly a really positive move and it builds on conversati­ons we have already had.

“This is a chance for traders to truly shape what support we can offer them during this constructi­on period. It very much reflects the council approach, which is to support that area, to retain its vibrancy and to be as helpful as we can to local businesses. We have already discussed various things with local businesses and moved it in the right direction.”

During the original phase of the tram constructi­on, traders on Leith Walk faced years of disruption while undergroun­d pipes and utilities were diverted to accommodat­e rails that were never laid. The council cancelled the Leith Walk section of the line in April 2009.

The entire extension route will need to be dug up to remove around 1,200 “utility conflicts” that remain from the original work. Leith Walk will be one of several starting points for the constructi­on work. The council will also use the £2.4m fund to ensure the area is kept clean, which could include free window cleaning, along with providing on-street customer service staff and logistic officers to assist firms with deliveries.

 ??  ?? 0 Leith Walk businesses to get financial assistance when tram works start at the end of the year
0 Leith Walk businesses to get financial assistance when tram works start at the end of the year

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