Over £5m is being spent tackling potholes and maintaining and resurfacing key local pavements and roads this year - as part of Hackney Council’s ambition to support people to walk, cycle and travel safely around the borough.
The money is being invested as part of the Council’s highway maintenance programme, which prioritises the roads, pavements and gullies that will be repaired or reconstructed.
In the last few years, the Council has reconstructed thousands of metres of pavement across the borough - with paving slabs used to improve the urban streetscape and help the visually impaired with uniform and consistent pavements.
The funding will also see key roads used by cyclists and drivers resurfaced. So far this year, Southgate Road and Ruckholt Road have been resurfaced, with a main road resurfacing programme starting in October.
£500,000 will be spent on reactive pothole repairs, with highways inspectors inspecting the entire borough to prioritise repairs. £300,000 will also be allocated to renewing road markings over the next three years.
£300,000 of the funding will be spent replacing 48 gullies on the Council’s public highway - helping improve drainage following increasingly common flash flooding.
The extra cash in this year’s budget comes as Mayor of Hackney, Philip Glanville, joined highways contractor Marlborough Highways, as they carried out a pothole repair in Hackney Central.
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