Work on a £43.5m transformation of Bradford city centre and build on the city’s architectural legacy is set to begin on Monday as part of a scheme delivered by Bradford Council, in partnership with the West Yorkshire Combined Authority.
The works are being delivered through the Combined Authority’s Transforming Cities Fund programme, which is aimed at making it easier for people to walk, cycle and use public transport.
Balfour Beatty is the construction partner on the project. It’s Area Director Stephen Semple said: “We are excited to start transforming Bradford city centre, turning the City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council and West Yorkshire Combined Authority’s vision into reality.
“Once complete, the scheme will leave a lasting, positive legacy for local communities and residents alike; providing additional green public spaces and new active travel routes which will significantly reduce air pollution in the City Centre.”
Set to deliver the perfect stage for the City of Culture celebrations in 2025, the progect will create a series of new public spaces through the pedestrianisation of some roads, while existing spaces will be brought up to a similar high standard. The new spaces will feature high-quality paving and landscaping, with new green areas, planting and seating, delivering the perfect spaces for public events or gathering to meet friends and family.
A new ‘linear park’ will be created to replace the majority of the existing road space on Hall Ings, featuring new trees and other types of planting. Demolition of the NCP car park is also due to start from late July 2023 to enable a new access point to the Interchange. Together, these elements will create a dramatically improved sense of arrival to the city centre for visitors and commuters alike.
The scheme will modernise the city centre to showcase it at its best, providing attractive new links for people walking or wheeling between the abundance of culture and entertainment venues as Bradford becomes a social city. The end result will provide the perfect setting for residents and the thousands of visitors due to descend on Bradford for the City of Culture year and beyond.
Alongside this, improved cycle routes will be created across the city centre connecting current and planned cycle routes, while enabling people to travel around and across the city in a more sustainable way.
Creating new attractive public spaces with greenery, reducing pollution and making it easier for people to get around the heart of the city centre without negotiating heavy traffic is seen as crucial to creating the right environment to boost the city centre residential population, attract new employers, and create an appropriate setting for the city centre as a thriving visitor destination.
Work will be in two phases; the first will see enabling works on road and pavements around the city centre, and the second will begin in 2024 and will create the new public spaces and walking and cycling routes in the city centre heart, with the vast majority of work due to be completed in time for the City of Culture celebrations starting in 2025.
The Council is warning that disruption and delays to journeys to and from the city centre are likely from the start of construction on 10 July, until the core elements of the works are completed in late December. Significant delays are inevitable at peak times, with the potential for delays at other times.
From January 2024, phase one works to the highway around the city centre will tail off, and bus services will move to their new routing, allowing traffic to flow more normally. While the second phase of works will see significant construction move to the heart of the city centre itself, pedestrian access will be maintained and vehicular access will remain largely unchanged apart from the removal of access to Hall Ings, which will be largely pedestrianised. As a result, disruption should thereafter be greatly reduced up to the scheme being completed in late 2024/early 2025.
Councillor Susan Hinchcliffe, Leader of Bradford Council, said: “We are ambitious for Bradford District, both in terms of driving the economy and seeing Bradford become one of the UK’s most vibrant and sustainable cities.
“Bradford has the potential to have one of the most attractive, accessible and dynamic city centres in the country and we are confident this scheme will deliver that. People will see a transformed city centre that they want to visit when the works are complete.”