GovWire

East Riding’s roads get £16.7 million maintenance boost

Department for Transport

February 2
10:02 2016

An extra 16.7 million is being provided to improve roads and stop potholes appearing across East Riding, Transport Minister Andrew Jones announced today (2 February 2016).

The A1079, A63 and A161 will all benefit in the first 12 months of the 5 year maintenance work on East Riding councils 233 miles of A roads.

Delivering extra targeted maintenance funding to boost local business and help deliver better journeys for road users is a key part of the governments long-term economic plan.

Transport Minister Andrew Jones said:

Enhancing East Ridings roads will make journeys more reliable and cut delays. This will ensure businesses and residents reap the benefits, driving job creation and economic development across the county.

We are determined to build a Northern Powerhouse and this investment demonstrates our commitment to improving the roads in the area.

East Ridings A roads provide vital links between the areas major towns and villages and improve and connections to motorways and onwards across the north of England and the rest of the UK.

The funding will also be used to improve roads for the benefit of business and as new houses are built in the Haltemprice area and in Beverley, Bridlington, Driffield and Goole.

The council is being given the money after bidding through the Local Growth Fund for extra funding to maintain roads. It is in addition to 58 million of DfT funding that East Riding council is already receiving to repair roads, fix potholes and improve streetlighting over the next 5 years.

The 16.7 million award announced today will improve a road network serving more than 80% of planned future housing and the majority of employment development in the area over the next 15 years. The resilience of the A-roads in the face of severe weather will increase with more than 100 improvement schemes planned each year in the area to stop road surfaces deteriorating during winter periods. The funding will also reduce the costs incurred by businesses when their vehicles are damaged by potholes and other road defects.

The Department for Transport will fund up to 16.7 million towards the 23.9 million total cost of the project.

The roads sections to benefit in the first year include:

  • the A1079 Deepdale to Shiptonthorpe
  • the A63 Knedlington Crossroads to Newsholme
  • the A161 Old Goole to Eastoft

Roads media enquiries

Related Articles

Comments

  1. We don't have any comments for this article yet. Why not join in and start a discussion.

Write a Comment

Your name:
Your email:
Comments:

Post my comment

Recent Comments

Follow Us on Twitter

Share This


Enjoyed this? Why not share it with others if you've found it useful by using one of the tools below: