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Economic Development

Major public transport investment needed for Bristol region, report finds

The government’s official infrastructure advisers has said the city region requires ‘some form of mass transit’

A train waiting on a platform at Bristol Temple Meads station (Image: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

Major investment in public transport, including some form of mass transit, around the Bristol city region has been recommended by the government’s official infrastructure advisers.

Greater Bristol is one of four º£½ÇÊÓÆµ city regions, alongside Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, that the National Infrastructure Commission (NIC) has identified should receive a share of £22bn worth of additional funding.

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The report seeks to set out a programme of “transformation” for the country's energy, transport and other key networks over the next 30 years. The NIC said its findings drew on two years of analysis, including a number of meetings with Bristol City Council, the West of England Mayoral Combined Authority and local business leaders.

The NIC said it had found that only half of Bristol’s population can currently reach the centre of the city by public transport within 30 minutes – which it said was worse than for many European cities of a comparable size.

The Commission also said the potential future growth in passenger numbers in the region could see an estimated capacity gap of up to around 6,000 people who would be left unable to get into Bristol city centre during the midweek peak by 2055.

The assessment found the scale of Bristol’s transport needs would require “some form of mass transit”, though the exact type and mix of projects would need to be a decision for cities to determine with the government, based on the costs and benefits, with business case development required “as soon as possible”.

The Commission suggested that the city regions benefiting from the proposed investment should make a financial contribution of at least 15-25% of capital costs, and that a combination of mechanisms such as business rate retention and capture of land value increases should be considered.