Nearly £20m is coming down the “levelling up” pipeline to bolster the county’s active travel plans.

Herefordshire County Council has been successful in its bid for £19.9m of funding from the national “Levelling-Up Fund” to help deliver a package of transport and active travel measures, to provide an alternative to cars.

Part of the bid is a new “integrated transport hub”, which will link cycling, walking, bus and rail transport in the city. The £10m hub — in which the Council has already invested £3m — will hopefully encourage a shift away from reliance on cars, providing an easy-to-use, reliable link to alternative modes of transport.

As well as covered cycle facilities and lockers to encourage commuter cycle parking, the Hub will provide new bus stands and layovers, taxi and car parking areas, including commuter and short term parking, and welfare facilities.

The package also includes Active Travel Measures both North and South of the River Wye.

Areas North of the River will benefit from a cycle scheme from Aylestone Hill along the A465 and Commercial Road, linking the north and east of the county to the transport hub, the city centre, and routes south of the river. Enhancements to St Owen Street one-way cycle scheme will improve access to the town centre and links to Rotherwas; Blueschool Street; and Newmarket Street will see new bus priority measures; and there will be improvements to the Great Western Way off-road walking and cycling path.

Meanwhile, work will be carried out South of the River to introduce or improve a number of informal “Quiet Routes” to the Hereford Enterprise Zone to encourage more of the people who work there and who live in neighbouring housing to walk or cycle to work.

To complement this work, there will be a series of improvements along the Holme Lacy Cycleway to encourage more and safer active travel to work and local services.

There will also be Safer Routes to School initiatives, and new 20mph speed limits in appropriate areas across the City, to increase safety for pedestrians and cyclists.

Cllr David Hitchiner, leader of Herefordshire Council said: “We are delighted that our bid for funding has been successful, and the investment will provide a real boost to our plans to improve transport in Hereford. The package of measures will improve connections between residential, employment and leisure locations.”