The council has received a half a million-pound sum to keep a major diversion route that runs through Reading well maintained.

Roads in Reading are used as a major diversion route during M4 closures, which can occur as a result of emergencies and planned highway works.

Whenever drivers are diverted, they are taken off the motorway and diverted using the A33 and the A4 roads which run through Reading.

The route takes drivers through Rose Kiln Lane, Berkeley Avenue and Bath Road.

Now the council has been given a total of £500,000 from National Highways to keep the route maintained, as it is designated as a part of its strategic M4 diversion route.

The investment will be made over two financial years, 2023/24 and 2024/25, with the council receiving a maximum of £250,000 for each of those years.

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The funding will be invested in five measures to improve the roads that make up the route.

Work will involve the resurfacing of Bath Road between its junctions with Berkeley Avenue and Southcote Lane, the Rose Kiln Lane junction south of Matalan, and Rose Kiln Lane between its junctions with Berkeley Avenue and Reading Link Retail Park.

The council will also retexture Bath Road going eastbound between its junction with Liebenrood Road and Southcote Lane, and introduce new durable road markings along the whole stretch of the A33 from Junction 11 to Rose Kiln Lane.

Reading Chronicle: Bath Road, Reading, part of the strategic M4 diversion route. Credit: Google MapsBath Road, Reading, part of the strategic M4 diversion route. Credit: Google Maps

The projects were agreed at the last meeting of the housing, neighbourhoods and leisure committee.

The council’s highways team was praised for its work in devising the five road improvement schemes and being named the Best Council Services Team at the Municipal Journal Awards 2023.

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Commenting on the award, Karen Rowland (Labour, Abbey) lead councillor for environmental services, said: “It’s a pretty stunning thing, and one of the reasons why you got it is because you’re awfully good with money and getting the last little penny or cent or whatever we call it in this country out of every single pound we get.”

It was also pointed out that the investment allows the council to allocate its own resources to other road projects elsewhere.

Meanwhile, Cllr Doug Creswell (Green, Katesgrove) welcomed the project for resurfacing at the junction of the A33 at Rose Kiln Lane.

Reading Chronicle: Resurfacing the Rose Kiln Lane junction as part of investment in the M4 diversion route. Credit: Reading Borough CouncilResurfacing the Rose Kiln Lane junction as part of investment in the M4 diversion route. Credit: Reading Borough Council

He said: “I look forward to that getting fixed because I get a lot of earache about that.”

The five projects were approved unanimously by the council’s housing, neighbourhoods and leisure committee.