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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Construction starts on active travel route for 116-acre Bridgend employment site

It is expected to be completed this autumn following £2m investment from the Welsh Government

The Brocastle development site in Bridgend

Construction work on a new active travel route for the Welsh Government-owned Brocastle site in Bridgend has started following a £2m investment.

The route - which is about 3km south east of Bridgend town centre and runs parallel with the A48 - will link the 116-acre site next to now closed Ford engine plant at Brocastle with the Waterton roundabout, 2km to the north west.

It will include the building of a 2km cycleway, kerbing and surfacing works, new signalised road crossings, replacement traffic signals and street lighting.

Read more: Former Ford engine plant in South Wales up for sale

It is expected to be completed by the autumn this year.

The £2m funding for the active travel route, provided by the Welsh Government, is the final package of the wider infrastructure works on the Brocastle site.

Construction will be undertaken by Abergavenny-based civil engineering contractor Alun Griffiths.

£2m on active travel route for Welsh Government-owned Brocastle site in Bridgend

Once completed, the active travel route design, developed collaboratively with Sustrans, Bridgend and Vale of Glamorgan councils, will be adopted as highway and maintained by the Local Highways Authorities.