Department for Transport News

19 May 2023

East Midlands to benefit from over £8.4 million to improve walking and cycling routes

  • Nottingham, Leicestershire and Derby to benefit from 8.4million of investment for active travel schemes
  • 12 new cycling and walking schemes to be delivered across the region  
  • Part of national effort to generate up to 16 million more walking and cycling trips a year across the countryand help over 800,000 children on their way to school   

Communities across the East Midlands are set to benefit from £8.4million of Government funding for cycling and walking schemes, helping to boost local economies, and transform the school run for thousands of children, generating up to 16 million extra walking and cycling trips a year across the country.  

Following extensive consultation with local authorities, areas including Nottingham, Leicestershire and Debry will benefit from a share of the latest round of the Active Travel Fund (ATF4) which will see 12 schemes delivered across the region with successful bids from authorities including Derby Unitary Authority, Nottingham Unitary Authority and Derbyshire County Council.

Alongside the environmental benefits, the plans will help ease congestion across cities, with people choosing more active choices which can benefit their mental and physical health and wellbeing, relieving pressure on the NHS.  

The country wide £200m package, announced in February of this year, will deliver a range of schemes across the country, including 121 miles of new cycle track, 77 miles of new paths and greenways and initiatives to make streets safer around 130 schools.

Active travel is also estimated to bring a £36.5 billion boost for the economy in a year through increased high street spending and better access to jobs, delivering on our priority to grow the economy.  

Transport Secretary, Mark Harper said:  

“We want to make sure everyone across the country can choose cheaper, greener and healthier travel, while we continue to support our high streets and local businesses.   

“This £200 million pound investment will improve road safety, ease congestion across the East Midlands and on public transport, and ultimately improve the health and wellbeing of the millions of people choosing active travel.”   

National Active Travel Commissioner Chris Boardman added: 

“By giving millions of people the freedom of choice to walk, wheel or cycle for everyday trips, this funding will help us improve public health, tackle climate change and give hundreds of thousands of children the independence to travel safely under their own steam. 

“Now our focus is working with councils to get these schemes built swiftly. We’ll be working together to ensure the projects are well designed and effective, so that they bring maximum benefits to communities and help improve lives nationwide.” 

The winning projects have demonstrated they provide people with attractive choices to use cycling and walking for local journeys, and do not include any Low Traffic Neighbourhood schemes. Local authorities have worked closely with local people to ensure the schemes benefit the community as a whole.     

Successful authorities have, detailed the benefits of successful schemes including Tamworth in Staffordshire, which will use the funding to enable active and safe modes of travel to schools, whilst Barnstaple and Ilfracombe in Devon will see an unused railway track converted into a walking and cycling route to connect rural communities. 

Safety and accessibility will be at the heart of improvements and creation of walking and cycling routes, meaning safety for women and children walking to school will be improved and people in wheelchairs and mobility scooters will see street designs become even more inclusive.  

Government funding has meant cycling across England has continued to thrive and is up 11% on pre-pandemic levels, increasing by more than 20% in the last ten years.   

Contact Information

Polly Nicholl
polly.nicholl@dft.gov.uk

Notes to editors

UPDATE NOTES TO EDITORS 

ATF4 – Local authority allocations

Local Authority name

Capability level

Allocated funding (£)

Bedford Unitary Authority

1

263,130

Blackburn with Darwen Unitary Authority

1

157,270

Bournemouth, Christchurch & Poole Unitary Authority

2

3,780,000

Bracknell Forest Unitary Authority

1

30,000

Brighton & Hove Unitary Authority

2

3,000,000

Buckinghamshire Unitary Authority

2

477,199

Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Combined Authority

2

3,896,590

Central Bedfordshire Unitary Authority

1

252,605

Cheshire East Unitary Authority

1

1,297,882

Cheshire West & Chester Unitary Authority

1

274,100

Cornwall Unitary Authority

1

500,000

Cumbria County Council

2

1,602,359

Derby Unitary Authority

1

140,000

Derbyshire County Council

1

3,005,000

Devon County Council

2

1,825,000

Dorset Unitary Authority

1

1,978,000

East Riding of Yorkshire Unitary Authority

2

855,200

East Sussex County Council

1

1,223,826

Essex County Council

2

5,270,000

Gloucestershire County Council

2

5,365,000

Greater Manchester Combined Authority

3

23,719,500

Hampshire County Council

2

2,477,515

Herefordshire Unitary Authority

1

306,000

Hertfordshire County Council

2

4,620,803

Isle of Wight Unitary Authority

1

700,000

Isles of Scilly

1

11,000

Kent County Council

1

1,569,000

Kingston upon Hull Unitary Authority

1

362,000

Lancashire County Council

2

5,529,992

Leicester Unitary Authority

3

1,800,000

Liverpool City Region Combined Authority

2

14,400,000

Medway Unitary Authority

1

486,418

Milton Keynes Unitary Authority

1

1,182,516

Norfolk County Council

2

2,240,000

North East Joint Transport Committee

2

7,203,211

North Somerset Unitary Authority

1

417,640

Nottingham Unitary Authority

3

1,762,288

Nottinghamshire County Council

2

1,081,761

Plymouth Unitary Authority

2

2,480,000

Portsmouth Unitary Authority

1

653,580

Reading Unitary Authority

2

75,000

Shropshire Unitary Authority

1

612,800

Slough Unitary Authority

1

413,000

Somerset County Council

2

1,583,322

Southampton Unitary Authority

2

814,464

South Yorkshire Combined Authority

2

2,430,943

Staffordshire County Council

1

669,087

Stoke-on-Trent Unitary Authority

1

509,320

Suffolk County Council

2

7,933,216

Surrey County Council

2

997,843

Swindon Unitary Authority

1

381,500

Tees Valley Combined Authority

2

441,269

Telford and Wrekin Unitary Authority

2

1,895,772

Thurrock Unitary Authority

1

305,000

Torbay Unitary Authority

1

237,366

Warrington Unitary Authority

2

727,950

Warwickshire County Council

2

4,761,000

West Berkshire Unitary Authority

1

275,000

West Midlands Combined Authority

3

12,608,201

West Northamptonshire Unitary Authority

1

673,314

West of England Combined Authority

2

3,641,803

West Yorkshire Combined Authority

3

17,430,668

Wiltshire Unitary Authority

1

978,000

Windsor and Maidenhead Unitary Authority

1

262,100

Wokingham Unitary Authority

2

606,215

York Unitary Authority

1

1,103,095