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15
Feb
North Yorkshire Council has set a timescale on when construction could finally begin on Harrogate's £11.2m Station Gateway scheme.
In an update to councillors published yesterday, Cllr Keane Duncan, who is in charge of transport at the Conservative-run authority, said building work is set to start in Autumn pending approval from government and the West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA).
The council will also have to win planning permission for changes it wants to make before work can begin. This will likely to be decided by councillors on Harrogate & Knaresborough's planning committee.
If the council’s flagship active travel scheme for Harrogate does go ahead it will be drastically scaled back from the original vision.
This was due to a legal challenge from Harrogate-based property firm Hornbeam Park Developments, which owns several commercial properties in the town including on James Street which was set to be part-pedestrianised under the plans but has now been dropped.
The gateway proposals now only include a redeveloped One Arch and Station Square, better traffic signals, a bus lane, a southbound cycle lane on Station Parade, new paving for pedestrians and cycling parking at Harrogate Station.
Construction on the county’s other two gateway schemes in Selby and Skipton is also set to begin later this year.
Keane Duncan
Cllr Duncan said:
At a meeting earlier this month, the Local Democracy Reporting Service asked council leader Carl Les why the authority had failed to win support for the original version of the gateway scheme in Harrogate.
Cllr Les said:
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