Liverpool makes significant progress with huge programme of highway works

A £9 million highways maintenance programme has started in Liverpool, as part of a £100 million programme.

Essential repairs will begin on a number of key routes across the city, including one which connects the city centre to the M62.

The roadworks are the latest phase of Liverpool City Council’s Better Roads programme and takes the value of on-site highways construction past £100m for the first time in the city’s history.

The Edge Lane scheme is a £3 million investment involving new road surfacing, footways repairs and drainage improvement. The works are scheduled to end in May 2021. This follows on the from the £10m investment to Edge Lane to accommodate the new Liverpool Shopping Park, which opened in 2018.

The works will be carried out by Liverpool based contractor Huyton Asphalt who are also beginning a £1.5 million upgrade to Green Lane, in Tuebrook. This scheme, running from Bolan Street to Santon Ave, will complete in April 2021 and involves drainage repairs, footway improvements and road surfacing.

Meanwhile, a £3 million upgrade to Upper Parliament Street and £4 million investment in Princes Ave/Road, as reported by Highways News, which includes a new 1km cycle lane, new event space and tree planting, are both to complete by the first week of August. The Princes Ave scheme is being delivered by contractor MNCN Plc whilst Kings Construction have delivered the Upper Parliament Street scheme.

In Liverpool city centre the £3.5million redesign of Victoria Street ends next week. This upgrade includes the relocation of bus stops as part of the wider £47 million Liverpool City Centre Connectivity (LCCC) programme.

A key element of the programme is the £22 million overhaul of The Strand which began two weeks ago. This scheme also includes a new cycle lane connecting the south of the city to the north, new tree planting and new public realm. A number of junctions cutting across The Strand to the Pier Head will be removed to improve traffic flow. And with wider pavements the scheme has been designed to also improve road safety for pedestrians after four fatalities in the past two years. The first phase will complete in Spring 2021.

Also, a new northern link road to connect traffic to the forthcoming Isle of Man Ferry terminal, which forms phase 2 of part of the LCCC programme, is also on schedule to finish in this September. This £7 million project has been part funded by the Department of Transport.

Contractors GRAHAM construction have so far delivered all the elements of the LCCC programme, including the successful removal of the Churchill Way Flyovers.

Joe Anderson, Mayor of Liverpool, said: “To have £100m of highways investment on site for the first time in the city’s history is a landmark moment – and an amazing achievement considering its being delivered during a pandemic lockdown.

“This level of investment speaks volumes for how much the city’s roads network needed to be improved and updated. It also underlines our ambition to grow Liverpool’s economy from the north docks to our connections to the motorway system, by creating better traffic flow, better cycle provision and a more pedestrian friendly city.

“Ultimately the long term benefits of these improvements, both economically and environmentally, will be felt for a very long time creating a Liverpool that is more attractive to live in, work in, invest in and visit.”

Councillor Sharon Connor, Cabinet Member for Highways and Regeneration, said: “Our Better Roads programme is a balancing act. On the one hand we need to catch up with long overdue repairs, whilst on the other we need to deliver new and ambitious schemes that will futureproof our economy and environment for decades to come.

“The current volume of roadworks is unprecedented, so unfortunately disruption has been unavoidable but our highways team and contractors have done all they canto programme these schemes in a way that minimises the inconvenience.

“To plan and deliver this volume of works, much of it complex, has been a massive challenge and the fact that more than 250 workers carried on improving our network during the Covid lockdown is a staggering achievement, for which we all owe them a huge thanks. As well as a better highways network for all users, much of this investment is going to Liverpool contractors, supporting the local supply chain and hundreds of jobs – which has never been more important given the current economic crisis.”

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