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Project

Stonehenge A303 Road Improvement Scheme

View from Normanton Down towards the stones at Stonehenge Landscape, Wiltshire. Traffic can be seen passing on the road.
The A303 runs past Stonehenge | © National Trust Images/John Miller

The Stonehenge Landscape is one of the most important prehistoric landscapes in Europe. We care for over 2,100 acres (800 hectares) of the World Heritage Site at Stonehenge and take our responsibility to protect it seriously.

For three decades now, we and many others, including the World Heritage Committee, English Heritage and Historic England, have sought a long-term solution to the current A303 surface road.

We have a long-standing ambition to see the removal of as much of the damaging, existing surface road from the World Heritage Site (WHS) as possible to reunite the landscape and enhance the integrity of this special place. 

On 29 July 2024, the Chancellor announced that the Stonehenge tunnel scheme, as consented on 14 July 2022, was no longer being progressed due to budgetary constraints.

 

The benefits of a tunnel on the A303

The current A303 cuts through the heart of the World Heritage Site, harming the setting of many of the 400 sites and monuments scattered across the landscape. It divides the Stonehenge Landscape, cutting off the southern two thirds for visitors and wildlife alike. For most people, visiting the stones is associated with traffic jams, HGVs and the drone of vehicle engines.

If designed and delivered with care, a tunnel would finally reunite this prehistoric landscape, protecting the special qualities of the World Heritage Site, reconnecting habitats and helping people to discover and enjoy more of the landscape.

The removal of the road would ensure future generations are able to experience the stones and monuments in a setting more familiar to their builders. This ancient place would finally have the future it deserves.

We continue to believe in the long-term benefits of a tunnel scheme for people, history and wildlife.

A303 Stonehenge Road Improvement Scheme project timeline

29 July 2024

Treasury Announcement

The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, announced that the A303 Stonehenge tunnel scheme would not be progressed due to budgetary constraints.

Please see the Fixing the foundations document published by the Treasury.

Our statement in response to this announcement:

'There are of course difficult decisions to be made when it comes to national spending plans, but we regret the lost opportunity to reunite this globally important landscape and to significantly improve the experience for the millions of visitors who come to this unique site. We continue to believe a solution is needed to remove the hugely damaging surface road that blights Stonehenge and its surrounding landscape.'

A view of the a field with cows in the background and stones of the West Kennet Avenue in the foreground at the Stonehenge landscape, Wiltshire

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