Connect2 was a five-year project run by Sustrans beginning in 2006 to develop new walking and cycle routes in 79 communities around the UK.

Project

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Connect2 was a five-year project run by Sustrans. It involves the creation of new cycle and walking routes, bridges and other facilities in 79 locations around the UK. It aims to create new networks of local paths, improve cycling and walking access and to connect local areas.[1]

Sustrans launched the 'Connect2' project in August 2006 in a successful bid to win £50 million from the Big Lottery's 'Living Landmarks; The People's Millions' competition. It was one of four shortlisted projects competing in a public vote for the grant and Connect2 was announced as the winning project on 12 December 2007.[2][3]

It is estimated that Connect2 will pass within half a mile of: 3,280,000 people; 1,426,000 households; 1,355 schools; 500,000 pupils; and 57 of the most deprived boroughs in the UK. With the aim to give the benefits of: 61.5 million trips a year are expected to be made on the routes; 79,500 tonnes of CO2 could potentially be saved per annum if each of the journeys had replaced a car trip; £135 million of funding in total will be generated by Connect2; and 116 local authorities are working to deliver Connect2.[4]

Schemes

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There are 79 Connect2 projects around the UK and distributed throughout the regions. The tables below were compiled from a complete list of Connect2 projects available on the OpenStreetMap wiki under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.[5]

East of England

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Scheme County Note
Norwich - connections to Whitlingham Country Park Norfolk
Royston railway crossing Hertfordshire
St. Neots - a River Great Ouse bridge Huntingdonshire
Cambridge to Wicken Fen
(Wicken Fen Vision Spine Route) (The Lodes Way)
Cambridgeshire Under construction. Substantially complete 2010. Further bridge work to 2013.[6]
Watton and Griston link Norfolk
Cheshunt, crossing the A10 to reach the Lee Hertfordshire

East Midlands

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Scheme County Note
Carlton-le-Moorland and Bassingham Link
Holdingham and Sleaford over the A17 road Lincolnshire Completed 2010
Links through Watermead Park Leicestershire
Northampton - Briar Hill and Upton Park, River Wellingborough, Rushden, Higham Ferrers.

London

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Scheme County Note
Islington Walking and Cycling Routes
Croydon Park links
Paddington - Westbourne railway bridge and links
South Bermondsey - disused rail bridge links
Bethnal Green and new bridge over Regents
Havering - Ingrebourne Valley links

North East England

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Scheme County Note
Bedlington and Cramlington Connection
Ingleby Barwick, Yarm, Eaglescliffe and Blyth Ferry
Durham- Belmont to Newton Hall over Belmont

Northern Ireland

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Scheme County Note
Derry - greenway and cycle path Peace Bridge
Strabane - River Mourne Bridge and links
Dungannon Park Connections
Ballymoney Railway Bridge and links [1]
Omagh - riverside path and new bridges
Three Mile Water greenway

North West England

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Scheme County Note
Nantwich to Crewe along the A530 corridor
Marple and Stockport, Goyt Valley connection
Huyton - The Statt Moers Park Links & Rochdale Canal Towpath Connections
Carlisle - Kingmoor and Currock
Padiham, East Lancashire Loop
Sale- Bridgewater Canal connections
Chester connections over the Dee
Northwich - Riversdale Swingbridge
Everton Park and the Mersey
Bury - the Woolfold Gap
Maryport Station Links

Scotland

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Scheme County Note
Glasgow - completing the Bridge to Nowhere
Dumfries - connecting two railway paths
Perth to Scone - River Tay Bridge
Hamilton, Chatelherault, Larkhall links

South East England

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Scheme County Note
Links to the north Kent coast
Dartford Riverside
Hastings and Bexhill coastal connections
Southampton - Itchen Riverside Path
Shoreham - harbour crossing
New Forest - Common Connections
Banbury, Oxford Canal links

South West England

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Scheme County Note
Bath, Two Tunnels Somerset
Bristol - Ashton Park, Long Ashton Somerset
Newton Abbot and Kingsteignton Devon
Ottery St Mary over the river to school Devon
Weymouth to Portland - Olympic connections Dorset
Bournemouth and Hurn Dorset
Connecting Salisbury, Alderbury and Wilton Wiltshire

Wales

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Scheme County Note
Tintern - connection over the River Wye Monmouthshire Dropped in 2011 after problems obtaining planning permission.[7]
Monmouth - local connections Monmouthshire
Merthyr Tydfil- Trevithick Trail to town centre link Glamorgan
Treforest - University links and connections Glamorgan
Port Talbot to Cwmafan and the Forest Park Glamorgan
Rhyl bridge at Foryd Harbour, River Clwyd Flintshire
Cardiff: Pont y Werin Glamorgan
Newport to Caerleon Monmouthshire
Carmarthen to Johnston riverside links Carmarthenshire
Clydach, Afon Tawe Bridge Glamorgan

West Midlands

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Scheme County Note
Worcester - a Severn Bridge at Diglis Lock Worcs. [2]
Shrewsbury - The Severnside Gap
Birmingham - Sutton Coldfield, and the Plants Brook Route
Kenilworth to Berkswell Greenway and Rugby
Leicester Road Viaduct
Hereford - The Rotherwas Sewage Bridge Herefordshire

Yorkshire

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Scheme County Note
Bradford Living Streets – Manchester Road Bridge Yorkshire
Bridlington to Flamborough Head Coastal Yorkshire
Scunthorpe Ridgeway connections Yorkshire
Killamarsh – Halfway Tram Terminus, Rother Yorkshire
Harrogate, Ripley and the Dales Yorkshire [3]
Brompton-on-Swale – a bridge across the river Yorkshire

References

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  1. ^ "Connect2 - FAQ". Connect 2. Archived from the original on 13 August 2009. Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  2. ^ "The People's 50 Million - Summary of the programme". Big Lottery Fund. December 2007. Archived from the original on 22 November 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  3. ^ "Routes scheme tops lottery vote". BBC News. 12 December 2007. Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  4. ^ "connected - Spring 2009 - Issue 1" (PDF). Connect2. 2009. Retrieved 15 July 2009.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "WikiProject Sustrans Connect2". OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  6. ^ "The Wicken Vision - Lodes Way". National Trust. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  7. ^ "Home Page". Wye Valley Communities for Safe Cycling. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2012.