Work will start in the New Year on widening a path alongside the A612 in a bid to encourage residents in Colwick to walk and cycle more.
The scheme will see the path alongside the Colwick Loop Road between First Avenue and Private Road No.1 widened using land from the verge to create a three-metre-wide shared use walking and cycling path.
It will be funded using £1.25million from Nottingham City Council’s Transforming Cities Fund allocation and will connect the area to other upgrades made from the city centre to Nottingham Racecourse.
This funding comes from the Department for Transport and can only be used for sustainable transport schemes.
Fifteen new trees will be planted as part of the scheme to replace 17 which will need to be removed to allow works to take place. Eleven of the trees requiring removal are susceptible to ash dieback and two others are considered to be dead specimens.
The council has said that no road closures will be needed throughout the 23-week construction period but that narrow lanes will be in place to ‘allow works to take place safely’.
The final four weeks of construction will require temporary traffic signals to be in place and further details about the timings of these will be given in the New Year.
Works are expected to start in February 2024.
Councillor Neil Clarke MBE, Cabinet Member for Transport and Environment at Nottinghamshire County Council, said: “This is great news for walking and cycling in the area as the newly resurfaced and widened path will improve safety for all.
“Currently, the path is narrow and so widening it will improve the ease of use for existing users while also encouraging new users to make use of this facility.
“The path is a great link for communities getting to work or shopping at Victoria Retail Park and it is great news that these works can take place without significantly impacting on motorists travelling along the A612.
“As we will be cutting into the current verge in order to construct the widened path, we will need to remove some trees to be able to do this but I would like to reassure residents that most of the trees being removed as part of these works are susceptible to ash die back which would present further maintenance and safety issues in the future.
“We know that some traffic management will be required for the final four weeks of the 23 weeks of the construction and we will make sure that these temporary signals will be in place during off-peak periods only.”
10 flats, no additional parking on a street that is already a bottle neck due to street parking and traffic flow through Netherfield, what could possibly go wrong!
Sorry, wrong article, should be about flats in Netherfield