Government details £1.8bn road improvement programme for the West Midlands

AN improved, bigger junction 10 of the M6, a much-anticipated link road connecting the M54, M6 and M6 Toll and improved access to the Black Country Enterprise Zone are among some of the measures outlined in a new £1.8bn government investment programme to improve the capacity and condition of roads in the Midlands.

The investment will see improvements and repairs along a series of motorways and A roads between now and 2021. The intention is to provide road users with simpler, faster and more reliable journeys. It will also boost the area’s economy and help to bring the country closer together.

The work is part of the government’s ‘Road Investment Strategy’, which was first announced last year and which is designed to triple levels of spending on roads by the end of the decade.

Highways England, the government-owned company which took over responsibility for England’s motorways and major A roads earlier this year, has outlined its plan for the West Midlands.

Highlights included:
•    improvements planned for M42 junction 6
•    new smart motorway around the M42/M40 interchange
•    development of a new link road connecting M54, M6 and the M6 Toll
•    new, bigger M6 Junction 10
•    plans to replace roundabouts at A50 Uttoxeter
•    widening of the A500 at Etruria, Stoke-on-Trent
•    new smart motorway between M6 junctions 13 and 15
•    improvements planned for A46 junctions
•    a new smart motorway between junction 2 and 4 of the M6
•    improvement for the A38 Derby junctions
•    widening of the A5 Dodwells to Longshoot
•    a new smart motorway between junction 23a and 25 of the M1

Across the Midlands, Highways England will also pump millions into maintenance schemes, environmental improvements and provision for cyclists.

Highways England Regional Director, Tim Harbot said: “These new schemes will bring huge improvements to journeys around the Midlands.

“The government has committed record funding to specific transport projects here so the Midlands can act as a transport hub for the entire country. As Highways England, we’re delivering that investment to help to unlock billions for the economy by increasing road capacity, improving the flow of traffic and improving safety and accessibility for all road users.”

Roads Minister Andrew Jones added: “Successive governments have failed to invest the sums necessary in transport. In many parts the system is at capacity. That is why we are committing a record £5.2bn in total to specific transport projects in the Midlands, so that the region can act as a transport hub for the entire country.”

Planned changes include a major junction improvement at M42 junction 6 to accommodate redevelopment in the area, supporting access to growth at Birmingham Airport and the NEC, and preparing capacity for the new HS2 station and surrounding developments.

Additionally plans for smart motorway at the M42/M40 interchange will remove current congestion and provide further benefits for access and capacity in the area. Smart motorways see the hard shoulder converted into a permanent extra running lane and technology installed to give drivers more reliable journeys.

Variable mandatory speed limits will be used to manage traffic speeds and help reduce congestion, whilst enabling safe operation of the motorway.

The development and design of a new link road connecting the M54, M6 and the M6 Toll will reduce congestion at peak times and improve safety on both the A460 and the A449/A5 between the M54 and the M6.

The M6 Junction 10 scheme will provide significant additional capacity at the junction, with part funding from the Black Country’s Local Growth Deal, including the replacement of both bridges allowing the widening of the roundabout to four lanes, and giving improved access to the Black Country Enterprise Zone in Darlaston.

Across the West Midlands, Highways England will spend around £600m on maintenance, including £160m to resurface more than 900 miles of carriageway; £225m for repairing and renewing structures like bridges and viaducts; and £60m to improve vehicle barriers.

Nationally, Highways England’s planned improvements over the first five years of operation include:
•    112 major road improvements, including 15 smart motorway projects to provide 280 extra miles of capacity
•    resurfacing the majority of the network
•    providing a more accessible road system by delivering over 150 new cycling facilities and crossings, including 40 by the end of 2016, and cycle-proofing all our new schemes
•    reducing the number of people killed or seriously injured on the network by 40% from the 2010 baseline

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