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Progress on relief road plans for Whitehill and Bordon

Monday, 28 January 2013

Plans for a new inner relief road for Whitehill and Bordon have moved one step closer now that an initial route preference has been confirmed and approval given to carry out further feasibility and assessment work, including consultation and environmental appraisal.

Hampshire County Council has previously identified that an inner relief road in Whitehill and Bordon is critical to the successful regeneration, development and growth of the town. The new road would reduce traffic congestion on existing roads in the town, encourage a thriving town centre, help to integrate the community (which at the moment suffers from being divided by the busy A325) and ensure easy access to new residential, commercial and retail developments on Ministry of Defence land that will be made available as part of the project.

The go ahead has been given for further work to assess the feasibility of the road project. This work includes carrying out important environmental assessment work and preparing the detailed design, all of which will help lead to a future planning application for the project.

The County Council confirmed that at this time the preferred route of the southern section of road would follow the line of the abandoned railway connecting to Whitehill and that the northern section would cross Ministry of Defence land, around the areas proposed for development, that would be made available as part of the project. This routing would be reviewed following completion of further feasibility work. Public consultation will be carried out on the preferred route during 2013/14.

Deputy Leader and Executive Member for Environment and Transport, Councillor Mel Kendal said: "The construction of an Inner Relief Road at Whitehill and Bordon is a critical piece of infrastructure that will enable the development and regeneration of the released Ministry of Defence land to progress. It is a good example of how an essential regional project can only be advanced with local authority intervention. There is more work to do now to develop the proposals, confirm the alignment of the road and in consulting the local community. There are still further steps to take, including completing a full Environmental Impact Assessment and securing access to land currently under Ministry of Defence ownership, but I am satisfied with progress so far.

"The decisions help to provide the project with clarity and direction on the proposed route and as such are essential for the successful realisation of Whitehill and Bordon's future."

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