Traffic Restrictions on A8 Greenock for Two Weeks

13 February 2023
Road users in Greenock are being advised of road traffic management to allow VITAL works as part of a £2.5million flood alleviation project.

From Monday 27 February for approximately two weeks, a short section of the A8 between Douglas Rae Road and Pottery Street will be reduced to one lane in each direction.

Trial holes need to be excavated to establish the exact location of utilities and connection points ahead of the main carriageway works being carried out later in the spring.

Georgina Reid, Scottish Water’s regional affairs manager in the west, said: “The recent flooding on this road was a stark reminder of how vital it is for us to deliver this much needed project.

“We will need to divert a gas main and re-route a water main before upgrading the existing sewer pipe and connecting it to the new Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) we are constructing beneath the council’s Pottery Street depot.

“In order to carry out that phase of the project as quickly and safely as possible we need to know exactly where everything is so that we can plan accordingly.

“We have been in discussion with Inverclyde Council, AMEY and other agencies to do all that we can to minimise any disruption and to keep the traffic flowing.

“We are advising road users to allow extra time for their journeys to offset any possible delays.”
A8 Greenock Flood Alleviation Project

Grounds of Pottery Street Depot

A8 Greenock Flood Alleviation Project

A8 East Hamilton Street

Construction of the new CSO began at the start of January. Once completed towards the end of April, the work will move out onto the A8 for approximately five months.

A robust communications campaign has been planned to ensure road users, commuters and visitors to the area will have plenty of notice of the traffic management.

Georgina Reid added: “We are acutely aware of the sensitivities involved in this project and the potential disruption for the wider travelling public and local people.

“There has been considerable planning, modelling, and discussion over many months to deliver much-needed protection against flooding on this arterial route.

“We are confident by keeping the road open, giving significant advance notice, and with the cooperation of road users we can avoid major delays over what is a relatively short period of time.”
 

Discover More