Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway Trust

Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway Trust
Founded 1995
Type Charitable trust
Location
Area served
Bedfordshire
Buckinghamshire
Website www.b-mkwaterway.org.uk

Bedford & Milton Keynes Waterway Trust is a waterways organisation formed in 1995 to promote a new canal route, the Bedford and Milton Keynes Waterway.

It is a registered charity in England, and in 2008 had a gross income of £201,287.[1]

The Trust was established in 1995 to promote the development of a broad canal which will link the Grand Union Canal in Milton Keynes to the River Great Ouse in Bedford through a series of waterways parks.[2] The planned route of the new canal runs from the Grand Union Canal at Campbell Park in Milton Keynes (close to Gulliver's Land), crosses the M1 motorway between Junction 13 and 14, runs near to Brogborough Hill, through Marston Vale and connects with the River Great Ouse at Kempston.

In 2003 British Waterways announced its long-term aim to build the connection from the Grand Union at Milton Keynes to the River Great Ouse at Bedford in conjunction with a number of partner organisations.[3]

The Trust has carried out design work on the project, funded through a £250,000 Lottery grant.[4] The canal project suffered an apparent setback in 2004 when Milton Keynes Council did not include the route in the Supplementary Planning Guidance for the Eastern Expansion Area of Milton Keynes.[5] However, this decision was recalled as a result of a public petition, and reversed at the subsequent meeting. The route within Milton Keynes is now protected by the SPG, and this episode serves to show public as well as political support for the scheme.

The first new structure specifically constructed for the waterway was completed in September 2009[6] – a 100-metre (110 yd) concrete culvert (Berry Farm A421 Underpass) incorporated into the A421 road as the result of £250,000 provided through Government Growth Area Funds.[6] The road opened on 1 December 2010,[7] although the underpass is not due to open for public access until sometime into 2011.[6]

One of the more speculative plans by the Trust is the "Brogborough Whirl" a proposed boat lift to take the waterway 30 metres up and down the eastern side of Brogborough Hill.[8]

See also

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External links

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