Skip to main content

Stonehenge Tunnel legal action launched

Legal action launched against the Stonehenge Tunnel project.
By MJ Woof December 1, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
A legal challenge is being launched against the controversial Stonehenge Bypass project in the UK – image courtesy of © Roman Zaremba | Dreamstime.com
A new legal challenge has emerged against the Stonehenge Tunnel Bypass project in the UK. The challenge has been launched by a campaigning body, Save Stonehenge World Heritage Site (SSWHS).

SSWS has given the UK’s transport secretary, Grant Shapps, notice saying that it plans to launch its legal challenge against the £1.7 billion tunnel project, which recently received approval from the UK Government.

The judicial review into the project will have to commence by the 24th December 2020.

The existing A303 road along this section of the route is unable to cope with the traffic volumes it handles at present and suffers extensive delays at peak periods. It features just a single lane in either direction, passing through a  village, and is utterly unsuited to the number of heavy vehicles it carries. Safety is an important concern.

The tunnel would divert the A303 away from the historically important Stonehenge monolith and provide a twin tube tunnel, measuring some 2.6km. However, there are concerns that the new tunnel construction and the cuttings for the portals would threaten other archaeological sites as yet undiscovered, as well as causing damage to the local ecosystem.

The Stonehenge Tunnel Bypass project has been cancelled in the past on grounds of cost. The current planned route is different from the version cancelled earlier however and is longer, having taken into account some of the concerns over the previous alignment. But an even longer tunnel might be the only option that would prove palatable to those claiming the project poses a threat to the area’s historical importance.

Because the ground conditions are poor and the water table high, building any tunnel in this area will be costly and complex. It will require extensive drainage and tailings removal to prevent the water table being affected as well to ensure no contaminants from the road leach into the surrounding area. The tunnel will also require considerable quantities of concrete in its construction to ensure it is structurally sound.

Related Content

  • Stonehenge tunnel controversy exacerbated by recent incident
    December 7, 2018
    The controversy surrounding the driving of a new road tunnel close to the UK’s Stonehenge monument has deepened following a recent incident. A 3m diameter hole was allegedly drilled through an important archeological find, a platform constructed of flint and animal bone, located close to the site Stonehenge. The platform is thought to have been erected some 6,000 years ago, making it older than Stonehenge itself, and preserves hoof prints made by aurochs, giant wild cattle that are now long extinct.
  • Stonehenge tunnel going ahead?
    September 12, 2017
    The preferred route has been announced for a new road and tunnel link on the A303 route in the UK that will bypass the famous Stonehenge stone circle. The project now finally looks as if it might go ahead after years of debate, although several hurdles have yet to be passed. The work calls for the construction of a new 13km dual carriageway link and includes a 2.6km stretch of tunnel. The new route will be located further away from Stonehenge and the tunnel is being built
  • UK Government announcing new road widening programme
    November 11, 2014
    The UK Government looks set to announce a major programme of road widening and improvement work. In all some €19.1 billion (£15 billion) is planned to be invested in around 100 large road projects. One of the key projects planned is for a new tunnel on the A303, close to the famous Stonehenge site. The tunnel will measure up to 2.9km long and will carry four lanes of traffic past the Stonehenge site. This tunnel has been proposed and cancelled on a number of previous occasions and has long been recognised a
  • English road works planned
    June 9, 2022
    Major English road works are being planned.