Skip to content

£8.9million lottery bid for key canal restoration

Published: Tuesday, 2 June, 2020

A bid for £8.9million to complete the restoration of the Stroudwater canal has been submitted to the National Lottery Heritage Fund (NLHF).

The funding will allow the remaining four miles of unrestored canal to be completed and will link the canal to the national canal network at Saul, bringing enormous health and wellbeing, environmental and financial benefits to the district.

In April 2018 the NLHF awarded £842,000 development funding to make sure everything was in place before applying for the remaining funds to see the project through to completion.

And in May 2019 the project was given a further boost thanks to a £4million Highways England grant to Cotswold Canals Trust to restore the ‘missing mile’ of canal which was lost to road builders 50 years ago.

Dave Marshall, SDC’s Canal Manager said:

“The canal project has been embraced by the thousands of people in the district who use it on a regular basis. People from all walks of life, ages and abilities enjoy the benefits of a restored canal corridor, and winning the bid will ensure it can be enjoyed by many more.

Much of the restoration work relies on volunteers to whom we owe a huge debt of thanks as well as everyone who buys a National Lottery ticket, which funds these grants.”

Stroud District Council leader Doina Cornell said:

“The regeneration of the canal is one of the largest such projects in the country and has already brought major benefits to the district. We really want to see the final phase succeed and Stroud and Stonehouse become canal towns once again, with a living waterway running through the heart of the district all the way to Sharpness and the Severn.

“The canal project fits in well with our priorities as a council to promote health and wellbeing and invest in the environment and local economy – all of which are especially important in the wake of COVID-19.”

Cotswold Canals Connected is co-led by Stroud District Council and the Cotswold Canals Trust with key partners Gloucestershire County Council, the Canal & River Trust and the Stroud Valleys Canal Company. Other partners include Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust, Inland Waterways Association and the Stroudwater Navigation Archive charity.

Stroud District Council has committed £3million to the project so far, with further contributions from Gloucestershire County Council, Cotswold Canals Trust and the Canal and River Trust. The total cash cost of the project, allowing for inflation and other contingencies, but excluding the value of volunteering, is £16.3million.

The canal’s history dates back to 1730 when an Act of Parliament granted proprietors of the Stroudwater Navigation the power to build it. It opened in 1779 and joined with the Thames and Severn Canal 10 years later, which established a largely inland waterway link between Bristol and London.

It was abandoned in 1954 but the founding of the Stroudwater Canal Society in 1972 led to the formation of the Cotswold Canals Trust. The Stroudwater Navigation links with the Thames and Severn Canal at Wallbridge and so far the stretch of that canal between Wallbridge and Thrupp has been restored.

Under the leadership of Stroud District Council since 2009, the project has seen restoration of 5 miles of canal, nine locks, and six miles of towpath so far.

A fully restored canal will attract huge tourism benefits, create 21 hectares of biodiverse habitat and canal towpath, conserve and digitise archive material charting the canal’s history, and attract more than £75million-worth of new private investment within five years of the end of the project.

So far the SDC-led restoration between Stonehouse and Thrupp has transformed the canal corridor, attracting £139million of private investment with studies suggesting that boaters and visitors to a restored canal would spend more than £5million a year in the Stroud district.

A decision is expected to be made in the Autumn.

News archive

Share this page