Returning to Gloucestershire County Council’s stalled redevelopment of Junction 10 of the M5, the BBC has some news, of sorts:
Work has begun on upgrading a motorway junction despite a £70m funding gap.
Preliminary ecological works for the £363m junction 10 near Cheltenham and Gloucester revamp – which would allow motorists to drive on and off both northbound and southbound – has already begun.
Councillor Julian Tooke, Gloucestershire County Council’s cabinet member for infrastructure, admitted they were taking a “financial risk” by starting work before having all the funds in place.

It might not be wise, but it isn’t that unusual for preliminary works to take place before a scheme gets a full green light.
Just look at the hundreds of millions being sunk into the Lower Thames Crossing, which may never get under the ground.
In this case, there remains a £70m gap between the funding and the projected cost of the scheme, which the council is hoping to fill with more cash from the Housing Infrastructure Fund.
The BBC helps out a bit with some wishful thinking:
The scheme is expected to unlock further development including up to 15,000 homes, 12,000 high-skilled jobs, and support for the £1bn Golden Valley development.
All those houses, just waiting to be unlocked.


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