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Kelston toll road : ウィキペディア英語版
Kelston toll road

The Kelston toll road was a private, temporary toll road, built by a private entrepreneur without planning permission between Bath and Kelston, southeast of Bristol in Bath and North East Somerset, England. It opened on 1 August and closed on 17 November 2014, when the A431 road reopened.
The road is the subject of a YouTube video by popular presenter Tom Scott. The clip shows the toll road and an interview with Mike Watts.
The road ran to the north of and parallel to Kelston Road, a part of the A431 road that was closed on 17 February 2014 due to a landslip. The toll road's west end is located at ; the east end at . As it was anticipated that the A431 would stay closed until the end of 2014, on 1 August 2014 the Kelston toll road opened for vehicles up to 3.5 tonnes and a toll fee of £2 per car. The entrepreneur was 62-year-old Mike Watts who followed a suggestion made by his wife. The toll station was without boom barriers. Without the Kelston toll some road drivers would have needed to follow a detour of up to , though much less for a journey between Bristol and Bath where the parallel A4 road could be used. By early October 2014, the road had been used by 100,000 vehicles. The cost of the toll road was £150,000, with a further £150,000 for the toll station, maintenance and other expenses.
In September 2014, Watts applied to Bath and North East Somerset Council for retrospective planning permission for the toll road. Although a decision had been expected on 3 October, it was delayed until the end of the month.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Kelston Toll Road application decision delayed by Bath and North East Somerset Council )〕 Permission was eventually withheld, and it was reported that Watts could be facing losses because the A431 was to be reopened earlier than originally expected. The council issued Watts with a demand for £3,000 in business rates.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The man behind Kelston Toll Road could be left in debt )
The road closed on 17 November 2014, when the A431 reopened. Watts said: "We have lost out - a rough estimate is probably about £10,000 to £15,000 adrift. But I'm not complaining." He said that the toll road would now be dug up, and that "within six months nobody would know the Kelston toll road had ever existed".〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=A431 Kelston Road reopens as toll road closes )〕 As the toll road company had insufficient funds for the reinstatement works, the original builders of the road offered to do this at no charge. HM Revenue and Customs also agreed to waive the shortfall in VAT due.
It was reported that construction of the toll road was likely to have caused damage to archaeological remains of medieval strip lynchets: as a result archaeological investigations will need to be carried out during the reinstatement of the land in order to understand what was there and the damage caused.
The council spent another £660,000 to finish the A431, the extra funds being required to provide deeper pilings found necessary as the works progressed.
== References ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kelston toll road」の詳細全文を読む



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