Quantcast
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 25061

Busway will ‘boost town’

THE controversial Luton-Dunstable guided busway and up to 7,000 new homes could kick-start Dunstable.

That’s the message from Councillor Nigel Young, a member of the executive at Central Bedfordshire Council, speaking about the council’s long- term vision at a Bedfordshire Chamber of Commerce-organised meeting at Dunstable’s Old Palace Lodge, in Church Street.

“Dunstable is at the top of the list,” said Mr Young. “There is no greater priority for Central Bedfordshire Council than the regeneration of Dunstable.”

The £90 million busway, linking Luton Airport Parkway Station with Houghton Regis, is on track to open in April next year.

Mr Young said: “There are longer -term aspirations to link the busway to Leighton Buzzard, forming a link from the railway station to Luton Airport.”

He told the meeting that the council is also keen on getting the busway to run directly to Luton Airport.

The busway is central to the council’s strategy to improve Dunstable over the next 10 years.

That plan is on the agenda for discussion by Central Bedfordshire Council’s sustainable communities overview and scrutiny committee on May 16.

The strategy includes building 7,000 homes to the north of Houghton Regis, doubling the population of the town to some 34,000.

The thinking is that the busway will make it possible for people to commute into new jobs at Luton Airport in minutes and into London in less than one hour. But the hope is that they would spend some of their cash in Dunstable, giving it an economic kick-start.

In June the council will start working on the first of a series of busway-linked traffic schemes involving 20mph speed limits, road redesign and the removal of pedestrian crossings and traffic lights. The £750,000 so-called Shared Space project will be part paid for by busway money.

Mr Young’s robustly positive message was welcomed by Brian Hibbert, the chairman of Bedfordshire Chamber of Commerce. He said he hoped Mr Young’s approach would be the start of a wider communication between businesses and the council.

Business people were also generally positive about the busway scheme.

Janet Theodore, of My Healthy Lifestyle, in Westbury Close, Houghton Regis, said the busway would make it easier for her part-time staff, who are mums without cars, to get to work.

Richard Cooper, director of Dunstable-based ASA Business Development, welcomed the “comprehensive and ambitious” plan and the strategy to achieve it. “It is a good plan and there is a need to communicate it,” he added.

And Peter Evans, of Peter Evans Studios, makers of film props and scenery, in Tavistock Street, Dunstable, said he was looking forward to his customers being able to get to him via the busway.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 25061

Trending Articles