News / King Street

Some of Bristol city centre’s most popular areas to be permanently pedestrianised

By Alex Seabrook  Tuesday May 31, 2022

The Old City and King Street in Bristol’s city centre are set to be pedestrianised permanently in a £2m plan.

Bristol City Council is preparing to ask for the funding to make major changes to the historic part of the city centre, making certain streets safer for pedestrians and cyclists. The pedestrianisation plans would also see more outdoor seating space for pubs and restaurants.

Bars along King Street have pushed for pedestrianisation for several years, and the council announced early plans some four years ago, before the pandemic hit. With the need for social distancing and boosting hospitality businesses, a temporary scheme was introduced in the summer of 2020.

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Now this temporary scheme could soon be made permanent. Transport planners will ask council cabinet members to approve the full business case for the pedestrianisation, during a cabinet meeting on June 7.

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Read more: King Street set to be pedestrianised 

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In a cabinet report, senior transport planner Sam Green said: “The aim of the project is to make the Old City and King Street area pedestrian-friendly by restricting vehicle movements within the project area, to encourage walking and cycling, reduce air pollution, make more street space available for commercial and cultural activities, and improve accessibility.”

Bristol’s Old City is set to be permanently pedestrianised – photo: Martin Booth

 

Green added: “The project will improve space for people, routes for walking and segregation for cyclists away from vehicles. Other benefits include improving air quality, combating climate change, improving health and wellbeing, addressing inequalities and tackling congestion.

“The project will improve the sense of place for the historic centre of Bristol. This will increase economic resilience in the area by encouraging more commercial activity, markets, footfall and future tourism.”

If the cabinet approves the business case, the next step will see council bosses submit a funding bid to the West of England Combined Authority for the project. This is expected to happen in October, and the whole scheme is expected to cost about £2.17m. It’s not yet clear when construction work would begin, or how long the project will take.

As well as removing through traffic, other parts of the project include dropped kerbs and tactile paving in the Old City, upgrading puffin crossings on Baldwin Street to give pedestrians more priority, and installing new benches on Baldwin Street.

Alex Seabrook is a local democracy reporter for Bristol 

Main photo: Ellie Pipe

Read more: ‘Overwhelming support for keeping Cotham Hill pedestrianisation’

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