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Work starts on vast eco bridge as part of long-awaited A417 scheme

The bridge will be 60 metres in length and 37 metres wide when finished and will span eight lanes of traffic

The Gloucestershire Way bridge will span the new A417 Missing Link and eight lanes of traffic(Image: National Highways)

Work has started on a vast eco bridge as part of the long-awaited A417 Missing Link scheme in Gloucestershire.

National Highways and contractor Keir have begun lifting 10 steel beams - each weighing 100 tonnes - into place to create the base of the Gloucestershire Way bridge at Shab Hill.

The so-called 'green' bridge will be 60 metres in length and 37 metres wide when finished, and will span eight lanes of the dual carriageway.

It will be used as a multi-purpose crossing for walkers, cyclists and horse riders, along with various wildlife species, including deer, badgers, voles and other small animals, insects and birds.

Planting on the bridge will mirror that of the landscape around it, according to National Highways, including 27 metres of calcareous grassland and hedgerows.

Steve Foxley, National Highways’ project director for the A417 Missing Link, said: “We’re really proud of the environmental work being carried out as part of this landscape-led project, and the creation of one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest environmental bridges is a fundamental part of that."

Beams being lifted into place (Image: National Highways)

National Highway, which is responsible for England’s major A roads and motorways, has already constructed four other º£½ÇÊÓÆµ 'green' bridges, which create a safe crossing for wildlife (as well as people) and join up habitats.

The other bridges are over the A556 near Knutsford; the A21 at Scotney Castle in Sussex; as part of the A30 scheme in Cornwall; and Cockrow in Surrey as part of the M25 Wisley interchange scheme.