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18
Jan 2022
North Yorkshire County Council has confirmed that the £10.9m Harrogate Station Gateway will be recommended for approval next week.
The Stray Ferret revealed last week that the county council's executive was expected to give the green light on January 25.
Now the county council, which is the lead partner for the scheme, has confirmed the executive is recommended to take the proposals forward to detailed design stage so work can start in spring or summer.
It says the move will save shops from decline, make the town centre more attractive and improve the town centre for cyclists and pedestrians.
James Street will be partly pedestrianised and traffic on some of Station Parade reduced to single lane.
The decision comes despite widespread opposition to the scheme from businesses and residents.
The results of the second phase of consultation, published last month, revealed that of 1,320 people who replied to an online survey, 55% feel negatively, 39% positively and five per cent neutral towards the scheme. One per cent said they didn’t know.
Nevertheless the scheme is expected to proceed with only minor amendments.
The report adds the "overall impact on retail footfall is expected to be positive", adding.
Residents living near the town centre fear their streets will get more traffic.
The Harrogate scheme is one of three in Yorkshire being paid for with £42m from the government’s Transforming Cities Fund.
County Councillor Don Mackenzie, executive member for access, said:
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