
A ruling in the High Court, following a judicial review, has quashed an order granted by transport secretary Grant Shapps for a £1.7bn road tunnel near Stonehenge to go ahead.
Campaigners fighting the tunnel plans claimed that the tunnel, aimed at cutting journey times on the A303, would be to the detriment of Stonehenge, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Highways England, which had planned to start work in 2023, claimed the tunnel would remove the sight and sound of traffic passing the monument.
A ruling by Mr Justice Holgate found that Shapps’ decision to allow the tunnel to go ahead was unlawful. He found there was a “material error of the law” in the government’s decision-making process and there was no evidence of the impact on each individual asset on the site. He added that Shapps had also failed to consider alternative schemes.
Register for free or sign in to continue reading
This is not a paywall. Registration allows us to enhance your experience across Construction Management and ensure we deliver you quality editorial content.
Registering also means you can manage your own CPDs, comments, newsletter sign-ups and privacy settings.









