º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Major transport shake up in Birmingham planned

City council pressing ahead with its vision for a green city which could see a repurposing of the A38 tunnels

Will traffic jams in the A38 tunnels become a thing of the past under new plans?

Major plans aimed at getting people out of their cars and onto public transport in Birmingham have been confirmed by the city council.

After first being mooted last October, Europe's largest local authority has announced it is pressing ahead with its radical 'Birmingham Transport Plan' which could drastically affect businesses, commuters and residents.

Chief among its proposals is to 'downgrade' the famous A38 tunnels which act as the main north/south arterial route for traffic travelling through the city centre, both to access local streets or move from one side of Birmingham to another.

As a consequence of this and other proposed measures, the car "will no longer be king", according to the city council's transport chief Cllr Waseem Zaffar.

 

Addressing councillors, he said the measures were "really, really important" and needed to tackle air pollution and a growing population.

He said: "This is my city, this is our city and Birmingham is being transformed and we need a fit-for-purpose transport system that tackles and reverses health inequalities in every single neighbourhood in our city and to do that we need a cultural change.

"We're ready to make these bold changes, some would argue they are not bold enough. They are radical, bold but also realistic.