Canal restoration funding in place

The Bridgewater Canal, which opened in 1761 as Britain's first commercial canal, is to undergo a £5.5m restoration.

Salford City Council has been awarded £3.6m from the Heritage Lottery Fund towards the project cost.

The project will stretch along five miles of canal between Boothstown and Barton. The council has also secured funding from a mixture of private and public sources.

Barton Aqueduct will be restored and the historic structure will be lit for the first time. Engineer James Brindley designed the aqueduct to carry the canal over the River Irwell.

Worsley Delph, where coal-carrying barges emerged from the Duke of Bridgewater's mines, will be re-opened to boats and visitors. There will be new paths, an events programme and a new playground in Dukes Drive Country Park. Physical works will start early next year and are expected to be finished in summer 2016.

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