“All the while, all we are really doing is watching construction inflation drive this further and further away from us”
The Chief Executive of Belfast Council has criticised a Stormont decision to put the brakes on a plan for a new bridge in South Belfast as “making no sense.”
The top official at City Hall made the comments during a committee meeting in which elected members agreed to demand that the Stormont Department for Infrastructure press ahead with the new Ormeau Bridge, which locals have been waiting on for over 10 years.
Members and officials were discussing the Belfast City Region Deal during the March meeting of the council’s important Strategic Policy and Resources Committee, when SDLP Councillor Séamas de Faoite successfully proposed the council writes to Stormont urging to end delay on the Lagan pedestrian and cycling bridge. All parties in the chamber supported the proposal.
READ MORE: £160,000 spend on Belfast European City of Sport questioned at City Hall
READ MORE: Belfast residents raise concerns about surveys for Irish street sign applications
The Stormont Department for Infrastructure has put all major infrastructure projects on hold while legal proceedings on the A5 case continue. While the Sinn Féin Minister Liz Kimmins says all infrastructure projects “remain live” some have said the lack of a timetable could mean projects, including the Ormeau Bridge have been effectively kicked into the long grass.
The DfI website states: “The Lagan Pedestrian and Cycle Bridge will be a twin-pylon cable-stayed steel bridge spanning 143 metres across the River Lagan from the Lagan Towpath at the Gasworks site to the Ormeau Embankment, close to the ‘Ozone’ indoor tennis centre and leisure complex.”
It adds: “The width of the bridge, at 5 metres, will accommodate both pedestrians and cyclists and improve linkages between communities from both sides of the River Lagan. It will also improve transport linkages to the city centre for pedestrians and cyclists and accessibility to leisure facilities and parks for local communities and commuters.”
Councillor de Faoite said at the Belfast Council meeting: “For some strange reason the Department for Infrastructure has decided that the A5 judgement means that a walking, wheeling, cycling project has to be reviewed in relation to the Climate Change Act. It baffles and bemuses me that they have decided to put on hold an active travel infrastructure piece, which the local community wants, and which has been delayed for around 10 years because of the amount of faffing around with the Executive and Assembly being down. We want to see movement on this as soon as possible.”
He successfully proposed writing to the Department for Infrastructure Minister expressing the council’s “deep frustration” that the bridge project, and also the North/South Glider project, had “ground to a halt”. He said the council would ask for “clarity” on the Lagan pedestrian and cycling bridge, and would urge the Minister to progress the project immediately.
Green Party Councillor Brian Smyth said at the meeting: “In terms of the A5 court case, I think it is really disingenuous how this debate is being shaped, and (what the reason is) for the hold up. It is not about climate versus roads, it is the Department versus competency.
“This is a department that is unaccountable and has been highly dysfunctional for years. It is not a new thing.” He said “a handful of civil servants are calling the shots, to the detriment of everybody across Northern Ireland.”
Chief Executive John Walsh said at the meeting: “As recently as yesterday I was highly critical of this decision, with DfI representatives in the room. It actually makes no sense whatsoever: a, there is no perception of any legal challenge, b, it is a cycling and pedestrian bridge. What part of that do they not get? The A5 climate aspect is not going to come into it, in terms of the construction at this site, to any extent whatsoever.
“All the while, all we are really doing is watching construction inflation drive this further and further away from us. That is my concern, and I have raised that very forcibly.”
Last month in Assembly Questions Minister Kimmins was asked to detail any projects which are now being held back as a result of the A5 Western Transport Corridor scheme appeal. The Northern Ireland Court of Appeal is currently reviewing a decision by the High Court last year that quashed approval for the £1.7bn A5 road upgrade. The Department for Infrastructure is seeking to overturn the High Court decision.
Ms Kimmins said: “The outcome of this appeal will have far-reaching implications for all major infrastructure projects pursued by departments across the North. To safeguard my Department’s limited resources, I am carefully considering how to advance other infrastructure schemes in line with the outcome of the A5 judgment.
“To preserve the progress already made, I have ensured these schemes can remain live until the final judgment is delivered through the extension of the tender validity periods for both the A4 Enniskillen Bypass and the Lagan and Pedestrian Cycle Bridge. My officials are also preparing options for my consideration to protect the A1 Junctions Phase 2 project.
“My priority remains the delivery of these vital infrastructure projects, and I am committed to protecting the progress of these schemes as much as possible while the legal process continues.”
For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

You must be logged in to post a comment Login