On 12 November 2020, permission was granted to join up existing dual carriageways on the A303 in Wiltshire via a new dual carriageway section, running via a twin-bore four-lane road tunnel just south of Stonehenge.
The decision reignited controversy which has raged over roads near this unique site for over 50 years, though since 2000, anger and frustration have grown exponentially concrening the 8 mile section of single carriageway road hereabouts, where drivers suffer time-consuming delays, and growing traffic threatens a unique world heritage site on several fronts.
Nearby, residents of Winterborne Stoke have seen their village effectively split in two by daily heavy traffic; for them, replacement of the single carriageway road linking the Countess roundabout near Amesbury with the existing dual carriageway west of their community is long overdue.
These problem stem from 1922, when Britain’s A and B road numbering system was introduced. The A30 was deemed the main London to Land’s End route, winding sinuously through increasingly picturesque countryside, connecting and traversing major towns along the way.
These characteristics prevented easy upgrade into a high speed south-west-bound route to accommodate rapidly growing 1960’s traffic, so attention then turned to an alternative westbound route, already assembled from various early cross-country turnpike roads… one of which passed Stonehenge.
This alternative branched from the A30 nowhere in particular outside Basingstoke, rejoining it 100 miles (160km) later… nowhere in particular outside Honiton, in Devon. It was formally designated A303 in the 1930’s – a route number transferred from previous outer-London obscurity – and traversed no big towns, thereby facilitating dual carriageway upgrades.
Nonetheless, almost 90 years on, over 35 miles of the A303 still awaits upgrading, and the project near Stonehenge is among eight schemes announced in 2014, intended to eventually complete a dual carriageway link to the M5 outside Taunton.
In 1950, British roads carried just 3.9m vehicles. Since then, public acknowledgement of the long under-appreciated environmental effect new infrastructure built to accommodate rising vehicle numbers can have has lagged far behind actual traffic growth. Traditionally also, traffic’s impact on the preservation and appreciation of Britain’s countryside and heritage has suffered a similarly low profile.
UNESCO declared the Stonehenge area to be a World Heritage site of Outstanding Universal Value in 1986, describing the preserved prehistoric site and monuments as forming “landscapes without parallel”.
In 1992, as the A303 grew into a major south west artery, and vehicle numbers hovered around 25 million, a tunnel to “solve” traffic’s intrusion into the Stonehenge landscape was first mooted. The same year, “Swampy” was making national headlines – digging in against bulldozers, attempting to stop a new Honiton to Exeter dual carriageway.
By 2002, a Stonehenge bypass was making news, as campaigning activists, pressure groups and protestors became steadily more assertive and more organised – gaining increased public support. The internet has undoubtedly helped facilitate these trends through worldwide connections, social media contact, and war-chest style fundraising – to finance everything from PR campaigns to legal help and specialist expertise.
Today, official assumptions, assertions and decisions can be competently reviewed and robustly challenged; not that long ago such official “data” usually allowed trunk road development to proceed almost unhindered. The relatively recent requirement for formal public inquiries into major roadbuilding projects – a move partly propagated by pressure from objectors – has changed that forever.
Highways England’s view is straightforward: with traffic now approaching double its design capacity, the single carriageway A303 – currently bisecting the vast Stonehenge site, allowing crawling vehicles to intrude into ages-old sightlines – represents an overloaded bottleneck on a vital westbound route from the London area.
It also acknowledges the powerful arguments which support removing the road from its present, highly visible, 1½ mile (2.5km) alignment, passing just 200 yards (183metres) from the monument itself.
The case for a tunnel to remove the sight, sound, and smell of traffic from the historic Stonehenge landscape appears compelling, and Highways England – and its predecessors – have spent years, and much taxpayer cash, investigating, researching, and consulting on re-routing this road.
The recently approved project was designed to address congestion, noise and pollution issues, and provide local communities with relief from traffic pressures. Its 8 mile (12.9 km) route was developed around detailed heritage, environmental and economic inputs, and, with £1.6bn government funding, is centred on a 2.1mile (3.4km) four-lane tunnel, with access roads integrated into existing dual carriageways, and incorporating two new major junctions.
The project was recommended for refusal by the Planning Inspectorate’s five independent inspectors, who, amongst other things, cited potential for “substantial harm” to the cultural heritage, landscape, and visual impact around Stonehenge. Their view was that the project “would permanently harm the integrity of the site as a whole, and seriously harm its authenticity”. Despite this, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps approved it – and promptly polarised long-divided expert opinion.
The National Trust feels that diverting the road underground will enhance the site, and Historic England is also supportive, while English Heritage stated the announcement was a “landmark day for Stonehenge”.
Unsurprisingly, Highways England also welcomed the decision. It predicts benefits ranging from the practical – faster, safer, more reliable journeys with fewer accidents – through unlocking south west economic development, to the pastoral: restoring tranquillity to the Stonehenge setting, and allowing visitors to explore and enjoy the whole landscape through new bridleways and byways.
Other claimed benefits include biodiversity enhancement, new rights of way for cyclists, walkers and horse-riders, and reinstatement of the chalk downland landscape.
A line-up of experts, campaigners and organisations were however unimpressed, with the press reporting concerns over aspects of the plans, insufficient supporting archaeological work, the decision to over-ride the expert recommendation to withhold consent – and more. The British Archaeological Trust, the independent Stonehenge Alliance pressure group, and an assortment of leading archaeologists, campaigners and Druids were amongst those most alarmed by the decision.
Though the expert voices raised in protest are surprisingly diverse, two common threads are discernible. First, concern over what’s seen as potentially irreversible desecration and damage to presently undiscovered archaeology – across a vast site ranging far beyond Stonehenge itself.
Several experts believe excavations and earthworks during tunnel and roadway construction will lead to loss of important, irreplaceable artefacts, especially since recent archaeological work has unearthed some previously unsuspected major surprises.
Here, Highways England points to the appointment of experienced archaeology and heritage services company Wessex Archaeology as lead contractor for this work. The company has been researching and interpreting the site and its landscape since the 1980’s, including earlier stages of the A303 project. An experienced team has been assembled to excavate, record and analyse the archaeology, largely before construction work begins.
A second thread supports a longer, 3½ mile (5.5km) tunnel under the entire site, including a completely redesigned A360 junction. It’s favoured by those wanting optimum tranquillity, uninterrupted sightlines – and guaranteed protection for unexplored, hidden history and heritage. Highways England hasn’t officially commented on the feasibility of this gold-plated option, but with unofficial estimates suggesting construction costs around £4bn, funding would surely require some supremely convincing validity arguments.. unless funding was recovered from road tolling – already mooted by some to replace fuel tax as electrified vehicle numbers grow. .
Unease and disquiet were crystallised when the Stonehenge Alliance rapidly resolved to challenge the project’s consent, tapidly raising a £50,000 fighing fund from over 2000 donors. Key members then assembled a “Save Stonehenge World Heritage Site” group, which, in December 2020, initiated an application for judicial review of the go-ahead, believing that the decision to override the inspectors’ recommendation for refusal was unlawful.
Backed by a detailed case, it claimed the Secretary of State failed to follow national policy, and breached international law under the World Heritage Convention.
The challenge was successful, and the case is due to be heard over three days starting on 23 June. A High Court judge has decided that the legal arguments put forward concerning Transport Secretary Grant Shapps’ decision to allow the project will be dealt with at a “rolled up” hearing, where the Court will decide both whether the claim is arguable, and, if it is, whether it will succeed.
Save Stonehenge World Heritage Site Ltd have increased their fundraising target by £20,000 to finance their High Court hearing. No work will start on the site until the legal processes are completed.
© Words by Dave Moss & images Highways England
References
Highways England issued this release after the decision to proceed was announced:
https://highwaysengland.co.uk/our-work/a303-stonehenge/latest-news/
The British Archaeological Trust issued this release after the decision to proceed:
Everything you need to know about the Stonehenge Alliance Pressure group’s campaign is here https://stonehengealliance.org.uk/our-campaign/the-stonehenge-saga/
Books and publications
The King’s Highway.. Rees Jeffreys, The Batchworth Press, London, 1949.
The full report and recommendations submitted to the Secretary of State on 2nd January 2020, as published by the Planning Inspectorate on 12 November 2020 following the Transport Secretary’s decision. can be found here
Examining Authority’s report and recommendation
A key report document: Appendix E. “Additional matters for the Consideration of the Secretary of State in the event that the Development Consent is granted for the proposed development.” is here Appendices
Page 32 of this PDF lists all “Attributes of Outstanding Universal Value for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site”
Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site Management Plan 2015
Historic England’s views on protecting Britain’s World Heritage sites are here:
The Protection & Management of World Heritage Sites in England – Historic England
The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport made submissions to the Public inquiry. They are here in PDF format 12 August 2019 and 2 October 2019.
Highways England’s announcement about the appointment of Wessex Archaeology:
Highways England’s news releases on the Stonehenge project are here:
https://highwaysengland.co.uk/our-work/a303-stonehenge/latest-news/
Details of the protestors’ bid to obtain a Judicial review are here:
Announcement that the application for a judicial review had been successful:
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Footnote:
In 1950, British roads carried just 3.9m vehicles. Since then traffic growth has roared ahead of public acknowledgement of the often ignored and certainly under-appreciated effect infrastructure built to accommodate rising vehicle numbers can have on the environment. Traditionally also, traffic’s impact on the preservation and appreciation of Britain’s countryside and heritage has had a similarly low profile. Today’s latest DfT figures show over 39 Million vehicles are now using British roads, ten times the figure in 1950.
Dave Moss has a lifetime connection with the world of motoring. His father was a time-served skilled engineer from an age when car repairs really meant repairs: he ran his own garage from the 1930's to the 60's, while Mum was the boss's secretary at a big Austin distributor. Both worked their entire lives in the motor trade, so if motor oil's not in Dave's blood, its surely a very close thing.
Though qualified in Electronics, for Dave it seemed a natural step into restoring a succession of classic cars, culminating in a variety of Minis. Writing and broadcasting about these, and a widening range of motoring matters ancient and modern, gathered pace in the 1970's and has taken over since. Topics nowadays range across the modern motoring mainstream to the offbeat and more arcane aspects of motoring history, and outlets embrace books, websites national and international magazines, newspapers, radio programmes, phone-ins and guest appearances. Spare time: hard graft on the garage floor attending to vehicles old and new. Latest projects: that 1968 Mini Cooper S has finally moved again after 30 years, and when the paint is finished, the 1960 Morris Mini 850 will also soon be ready for the road again...