PART 3STREETS
Street works
article 12 12.—(1) The undertaker may, for the purposes of the authorised development, enter on so much of any of the streets specified in Schedule 3 (streets subject to street works) and may—
article 12 1 a (a)break up or open the street, or any sewer, drain or tunnel under it;
article 12 1 b (b)tunnel or bore under the street or carry out works to strengthen or repair the carriageway;
article 12 1 c (c)remove or use all earth and materials in or under the street;
article 12 1 d (d)place and keep apparatus in the street;
article 12 1 e (e)maintain, renew or alter apparatus in the street, change its position or remove it;
article 12 1 f (f)demolish, remove, replace and relocate any street furniture;
article 12 1 g (g)execute any works to provide or improve sight lines;
article 12 1 h (h)execute and maintain any works to provide hard and soft landscaping;
article 12 1 i (i)carry out re-lining and placement of road markings;
article 12 1 j (j)remove and install temporary and permanent signage; and
article 12 1 k (k)execute any works required for or incidental to any works referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) to (j).
(2) Without prejudice to the specific powers conferred by paragraph (1) but subject to paragraph (3) the undertaker may carry out any of the works referred to in paragraph (1) in any street.
(3) The powers conferred by paragraph (2) may not be exercised without the consent of the street authority but such consent must not be unreasonably withheld and if the street authority has received an application for consent to exercise powers under paragraph (2) accompanied by all relevant information and fails to notify the undertaker of its decision before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which the application is submitted with all relevant information, it is deemed to have granted consent.
(4) The undertaker must restore any street that has been temporarily altered under this article to the reasonable satisfaction of the street authority.
(5) The authority given by paragraphs (1) and (2) are a statutory right for the purposes of section 48(3) (streets, street works and undertakers) and section 51(1) (prohibition of unauthorised street works) of the 1991 Act.
(6) Where the undertaker is not the street authority the provisions of sections 54 (advance notice of certain works) to 106 (index of defined expressions) of the 1991 Act apply to any such works.
Power to alter layout, etc., of streets
article 13 13.—(1) Subject to paragraph (3), the undertaker may for the purposes of constructing and maintaining the authorised development alter the layout of any street within the Order limits and the layout of any street at its junction with such a street, and, without limitation on the scope of this paragraph, the undertaker may—
article 13 1 a (a)increase the width of the carriageway of the street by reducing the width of any kerb, footpath, footway, cycle track or verge within the street;
article 13 1 b (b)alter the level or increase the width of such a kerb, footway, cycle track or verge;
article 13 1 c (c)reduce the width of the carriageway of the street; and
article 13 1 d (d)make and maintain crossovers and passing places.
(2) The undertaker must restore any street that has been temporarily altered under this article to the reasonable satisfaction of the street authority.
(3) The powers conferred by paragraph (1) may not be exercised without the consent of the street authority but such consent must not be unreasonably withheld and if the street authority has received an application for consent to exercise powers under paragraph (1) accompanied by all relevant information and fails to notify the undertaker of its decision before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which the application is submitted with all relevant information, it is deemed to have granted consent.
(4) Paragraphs (2) and (3) do not apply where the undertaker is the street authority for a street in which the works are being carried out.
Permanent stopping up of streets
article 14 14.—(1) Subject to the provisions of this article, the undertaker may, in connection with the carrying out of the authorised development, stop up permanently the streets specified in column (2) of Schedule 4 (streets to be permanently stopped up for which a substitute is to be provided) to the extent specified, by reference to the letters shown on the access and rights of way plans, in column (3) of that Schedule.
(2) No street specified in column (2) of Schedule 4 (streets to be permanently stopped up for which a substitute is to be provided) is to be wholly or partly stopped up under this article unless—
article 14 2 a (a)the new street to be substituted for it, which is specified in column (4) of that Schedule, has been completed to the reasonable satisfaction of the relevant street authority and is open for use; or
article 14 2 b (b)a temporary alternative route for the passage of such traffic as could have used the street to be stopped up is first provided and subsequently maintained by the undertaker between the commencement and termination points for the stopping up of the street until the completion and opening of the new street in accordance with sub-paragraph (a).
(3) Where a street has been stopped up under this article—
article 14 3 a (a)all rights of way over or along the street so stopped up are extinguished; and
article 14 3 b (b)the undertaker may appropriate and use for the purposes of the authorised development so much of the street as is bounded on both sides by land owned by the undertaker.
(4) Any person who suffers loss by the suspension or extinguishment of any private right of way under this article is entitled to compensation from the undertaker to be determined, in case of dispute, under Part 1 of the 1961 Act.
(5) This article is subject to article 35 (apparatus and rights of statutory undertakers in stopped up streets).
Temporary stopping up of streets
article 15 15.—(1) The undertaker, during and for the purposes of carrying out and maintaining the authorised development, may temporarily stop up, alter or divert any street and may for any reasonable time—
article 15 1 a (a)divert the traffic or a class of traffic from the street; and
article 15 1 b (b)subject to paragraph (2), prevent all persons from passing along the street.
(2) The undertaker must provide reasonable access for pedestrians going to or from premises abutting a street affected by the temporary stopping up, alteration or diversion of a street under this article if there would otherwise be no such access.
(3) The undertaker may not temporarily stop up, alter or divert any street without the consent of the street authority, and the street authority may attach reasonable conditions to any such consent.
(4) Any person who suffers loss by the suspension of any private right of way under this article is entitled to compensation from the undertaker to be determined, in case of dispute, under Part 1 (determination of questions of disputed compensation) of the 1961 Act.
Public rights of way – creation and temporary stopping up
article 16 16.—(1) Subject to the provisions of this article, the undertaker may, for any reasonable time, in connection with the carrying out and maintaining of the authorised development—
article 16 1 a (a)temporarily stop up the public rights of way specified in columns (1) and (2) of Part 1 of Schedule 5 (public rights of way to be temporarily suspended) to the extent specified in column (3) of that Part of that Schedule;
article 16 1 b (b)provide substitute temporary public rights of way where specified in column (4) of Part 1 of Schedule 5 (public rights of way to be temporarily suspended) on an alignment to be agreed with the relevant highway authority prior to the temporary stopping up of the public right of way concerned; and
article 16 1 c (c)temporarily stop up any other public rights of way to the extent agreed with the relevant highway authority.
(2) Any temporary substitute right of way must be maintained by the undertaker with appropriate signage, and must remain in place until the relevant temporarily suspended public right of way for which it is a substitute is again open for use by the public.
(3) The undertaker must not exercise the powers in paragraph (1) unless it has given not less than 28 days’ notice in writing of its intention so to do the relevant highway authority.
(4) The undertaker may in connection with carrying out of the authorised development provide the new public rights of way specified in column (2) of Part 2 of Schedule 5 (new public rights of way to be created) and open them for use on such day as approved by the relevant highway authority.
Accesses
article 17 17.—(1) The undertaker may, for the purposes of the authorised development and subject to paragraph (2), with the consent of the relevant highway authority or the relevant street authority as appropriate (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld), form and lay out such means of access (permanent or temporary) or improve existing means of access, at such locations within the Order limits as the undertaker reasonably requires for the purposes of the authorised development.
(2) The agreement of the relevant highway authority or the relevant street authority as appropriate is not required for the formulation, layout or improvement of a new or existing means of access described in Schedule 1 (authorised development) and carried out in accordance with the relevant provisions of Parts 1 and 2 of Schedule 14 (protective provisions).
(3) If a highway authority or street authority which has received an application for consent under paragraph (1) fails to notify the undertaker of its decision before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which the application was made, it is deemed to have granted consent.
(4) The private means of access as set out in column (2) of Part 1 of Schedule 6 (private means of access to be closed for which no substitute is to be provided) may be closed by the undertaker without a substitute being provided.
(5) The undertaker may provide the private means of access as set out in column (2) of Part 2 of Schedule 6 (new private means of access created).
Clearways, prohibitions and restrictions
article 18 18.—(1) Subject to paragraphs (3) and (4), from the date on which the undertaker notifies the relevant highway authority, no person, except upon the direction or with the permission of a police officer or traffic officer in uniform, is to cause or permit any vehicle to wait on any part of a carriageway specified in column (2) of Schedule 7 (clearways) as indicated in column (3) of Schedule 7.
(2) Nothing in paragraph (1) applies—
article 18 2 a (a)to render it unlawful to cause or permit a vehicle to wait on any part of the carriageway or verge, for so long as may be necessary to enable that vehicle to be used in connection with—
article 18 2 a i (i)the removal of any obstruction to traffic;
article 18 2 a ii (ii)the maintenance, improvement, reconstruction or operation of the carriageway or verge;
article 18 2 a iii (iii)the laying, erection, inspection, maintenance, alteration, repair, renewal or removal in or near the carriageway or verge of any sewer, main pipe, conduit, wire, cable or other apparatus for the supply of gas, water, electricity or any electronic communications apparatus as defined in Schedule 3A to the Communications Act 2003(1); or
article 18 2 a iv (iv)any building operation or demolition;
article 18 2 b (b)in relation to a vehicle being used—
article 18 2 b i (i)for police, ambulance, fire and rescue authority or traffic officer purposes;
article 18 2 b ii (ii)in the service of a local authority, Highways England, a safety camera partnership or the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency in pursuance of statutory powers or duties;
article 18 2 b iii (iii)in the service of a water or sewerage undertaker within the meaning of the Water Industry Act 1991(2); or
article 18 2 b iv (iv)by a universal service provider for the purposes of providing a universal postal service as defined by the Postal Services Act 2011(3); or
article 18 2 c (c)in relation to a vehicle waiting when the person in control of it is—
article 18 2 c i (i)required by law to stop;
article 18 2 c ii (ii)obliged to stop in order to avoid an accident; or
article 18 2 c iii (iii)prevented from proceeding by circumstances outside the person’s control.
(3) No person is to cause or permit any vehicle to wait on any part of the roads described in Schedule 7 for the purposes of selling, or dispensing of, goods from that vehicle, unless the goods are immediately delivered at, or taken into, premises adjacent to the land on which the vehicle stood when the goods were sold or dispensed.
(4) Paragraphs (1) to (3) have effect as if made by a traffic regulation order under the 1984 Act and their application may be varied or revoked by such an order under that Act or by any other enactment which provides for the variation or revocation of such orders.
Classification of highways
article 19 19.—(1) From the date on which the undertaker and relevant highway authority agree that the new highways described in Schedule 8 (classification of highways) have been completed they are to become classified roads as set out in column (3) of Schedule 8 for the purpose of any enactment or instrument which refers to highways classified as roads as if such classification had been made under section 12(3) (general provisions as to principal and classified roads) of the 1980 Act.
(2) The application of paragraph (1) may be varied or revoked by any instrument made under any enactment which provides for the variation or revocation of such matters.
Speed limits
article 20 20.—(1) From the date on which the roads specified in Schedule 9 (Speed Limits) are open for traffic, no person is to drive any motor vehicle at a speed exceeding the limit in miles per hour specified in column (3) of Schedule 9 along the lengths of road identified in the corresponding row of column (2).
(2) Without limiting the scope of the specific powers conferred by paragraph (1) but subject to the provisions of this article and the consent (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld) of the relevant traffic authority, whose consent may be subject to reasonable conditions, the undertaker may, in so far as may be expedient or necessary for the purposes of or in connection with the construction, operation or maintenance of the authorised development, impose a temporary speed limit either at all times or at times, on days or during such periods, and on such highways as may be specified by the undertaker.
(3) The undertaker must not exercise the powers in paragraph (20) unless it has given not less than 4 weeks’ notice in writing of its intention so to do to the chief officer of police and to the relevant traffic authority.
(4) The speed limits imposed by this Order are deemed to have been imposed by an order under the 1984 Act and—
article 20 4 a (a)have the same effect; and
article 20 4 b (b)may be varied by the relevant traffic authority in the same manner,
as any other speed limit imposed by an order under that Act.
(5) No speed limit imposed by this Order applies to vehicles falling within regulation 3(4) (regulations in relation to orders and notices under the 1984 Act) of the Road Traffic Exemptions (Special Forces) (Variation and Amendment) Regulations 2011(4) when used in accordance with regulation 3(5) of those Regulations.
Traffic regulation
article 21 21.—(1) Subject to the provisions of this article and the consent (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld) of the relevant traffic authority, whose consent may be subject to reasonable conditions, the undertaker may, in so far as may be expedient or necessary for the purposes of or in connection with the construction, operation or maintenance of the authorised development—
article 21 1 a (a)revoke, amend or suspend in whole or in part any order made, or having effect as if made, under the 1984 Act;
article 21 1 b (b)permit, prohibit or restrict the stopping, parking, waiting, loading or unloading of vehicles on any road;
article 21 1 c (c)suspend or authorise the use as a parking place of any highway;
article 21 1 d (d)make provision as to the direction or priority of vehicular traffic on any highway; and
article 21 1 e (e)permit or prohibit vehicular access to any highway,
either at all times or at times, on days or during such periods as may be specified by the undertaker.
(2) The undertaker is not to exercise the powers in paragraph (3) unless it has—
article 21 2 a (a)given not less than 4 weeks’ notice in writing of its intention so to do to the chief officer of police and to the relevant traffic authority; and
article 21 2 b (b)advertised its intention in such manner as the relevant traffic authority may specify in writing within 7 days of the relevant traffic authority’s receipt of notice of the undertaker’s intention under sub-paragraph (a).
(3) Any prohibition, restriction or other provision made by the undertaker under paragraph (3) is to—
article 21 3 a (a)have effect as if duly made by, as the case may be—
article 21 3 a i (i)the relevant traffic authority as a traffic regulation order under the 1984 Act; or
article 21 3 a ii (ii)the local highway authority as an order under section 32 (power of local authorities to provide parking places) of the 1984 Act; and
article 21 3 b (b)be deemed to be a traffic order for the purposes of Schedule 7 (road traffic contraventions subject to civil enforcement) to the Traffic Management Act 2004(5).
(4) Any prohibition, restriction or other provision made under this article may be suspended, varied or revoked by the undertaker from time to time by subsequent exercise of the powers conferred by paragraph (3).
(5) Expressions used in this article and in the 1984 Act have the same meaning in this article as in that Act.
(6) If the relevant traffic authority fails to notify the undertaker of its decision within 28 days of receiving an application for consent under paragraph (3) that is accompanied by all relevant information the relevant traffic authority is deemed to have given consent.
Agreements with street authorities
article 22 22.—(1) A street authority and the undertaker may enter into agreements with respect to—
article 22 1 a (a)the construction of any new street including any structure carrying the street over or under any part of the authorised development;
article 22 1 b (b)the strengthening, improvement, repair or reconstruction of any street under the powers conferred by this Order;
article 22 1 c (c)the maintenance of landscaping within a highway constructed as part of the highway works;
article 22 1 d (d)the maintenance of highway related assets which fall outside of the extent of highway maintained by a relevant highway authority;
article 22 1 e (e)any stopping up, alteration or diversion of a street as part of or to facilitate the authorised development;
article 22 1 f (f)the carrying out in the highway of any of the works referred to in article 12(1) (street works); or
article 22 1 g (g)the adoption by a street authority which is the highway authority of works—
article 22 1 g i (i)undertaken on a street which is existing publicly maintainable highway; and
article 22 1 g ii (ii)which the undertaker and highway authority agree are to be adopted as publicly maintainable highway.
(2) If such an agreement provides that the street authority must undertake works on behalf of the undertaker the agreement may, without prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1)—
article 22 2 a (a)make provision for the street authority to carry out any function under this Order which relates to the street in question;
article 22 2 b (b)specify a reasonable time for the completion of the works; and
article 22 2 c (c)contain such terms as to payment and otherwise as the parties consider appropriate.
2003 c. 21; Schedule 3A was inserted by Schedule 1 to the Digital Economy Act 2017 (c. 30).