October 31, 2024
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Three weeks of improvement works to a key bus stop outside the Queen’s Medical Centre will start from Monday (4 November).
As part of a number of ‘pinch point’ schemes falling under the wider Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP), the aim is to support bus journeys across the city along important routes which are known to experience delays.
These latest works will improve the bus stop QM02, in Derby Road, which is situated outside the main entrance of the hospital. The project will include:
- Changing the line of the kerb to help buses pulling up to the stop and making it easier for passengers to get on and off;
- Providing tactile ‘warning’ paving to help people with visual impairments or blindness to navigate and locate the boarding point;
- Addressing the issue of rutting – depressions in the road surface left by bus tyres over time – through the application of a ‘Hardipave’ treatment;
- Pavement resurfacing between the bus stop and the pedestrian crossing.
During these works, there will be a pavement closure and the QM02 bus stop will not be in use.
Pedestrians will need to follow a signed diversion route from the QMC roundabout along Derby Road service road or to cross at the pedestrian crossing.
A temporary bus stop will be provided around 100 metres to the right of the existing stop and signs will be in place for passengers for the following services:
- NCT: 34, 34C, 35, 36, N34
- CT4N: 18, 18a, 18b, 18x 20, L2
- Trentbarton: Red Arrow, Indigo, I4
There will also be lane closures in place during the second week of the programme, starting on Monday 11 November, in order to provide a safe working space to apply the Hardipave surfacing treatment.
Further information is available by emailing [email protected].
The BSIP programme is a partnership between councils and bus operators in Greater Nottingham to bid for £13.8m of Government funding to improve services for local passengers. It has been produced by Nottingham City Council and Nottinghamshire County Council.
It will fund greener buses, reduced fares for younger people, and more contactless ticketing options, among a series of proposals that aim to make using the bus even easier.
Projects already completed under the scheme include supporting young people leaving care to travel around the city, adding a youth fares discount for all 19 to 21-year-olds, a discount scheme for commuters and protecting and enhancing service frequencies on 14 bus services, including the 70/71, 49, 50, 53/54, 18a, 3, the two and 1E.