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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Dan Haygarth

Southport Pier to stay closed until £13 million worth of repairs done

The refurbishment of Southport Pier could cost £10m more than previously planned.

The pier was forced to close last December due to health and safety concerns and it remains closed now. Only months before, Sefton Council had committed to a £3m investment to replace the wooden beams which make up the pier's surface.

However, the council said it has received feedback which can inform the next steps of the project. These steps will be presented to an emergency meeting of the cabinet on Thursday, June 29.

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An independent survey is expected to identify that more than 25% of the pier’s decking is majorly damaged or in need of immediate replacement. This means that the pier will remain closed until the full refurbishment job, which will include working on more than 14 miles of severely decayed decking, is completed.

At the moment, no timescale has been provided for the refurbishment works and subsequent reopening.

The council said the capital costs of the works will also remain unconfirmed while the final survey report is awaited, and until construction tender feedback for a full refurbishment project is received. However, it is estimated that the full refurbishment works required to open the pier safely again could exceed £13 million - more than £10 million in excess of the £3m the council agreed to borrow to fund decking replacement.

As a result, the council will look to secure funding to assist with the project.

Sefton Council leader, Cllr Ian Maher said: “This cabinet report makes sobering reading. It is going to be a huge and costly scheme, but the Cabinet is supportive of the proposal for a full refurbishment project.

“We recognise the pier’s importance in Southport’s, in Sefton’s and in the country’s seaside heritage as well as its popularity with the many millions who visit Southport’s wide range of attractions each year.

“The cabinet report also leaves me in no doubt that the decision to close the pier after last December’s extreme weather to ensure the safety of people visiting and working on the pier, although not taken lightly, was the right one.”

Cllr Maher added: “Last year, before the pier was hit by the extreme weather in December 2022, which significantly worsened some of the wear already identified, the council had already earmarked £3 million to replace all the decking.

“The actual refurbishment figure could exceed that by more than £10 million, such is the amount of deterioration inflicted by the elements on our much-loved pier.

“We have to consider all options available to us, but the council is not supportive of any suggestion of closing the pier permanently, and it has been disappointing to see some casting doubt on it’s future and talking down the council’s commitment to it - particularly as some of those doing so claim to represent the town’s best interests.

“What we need now is support and we are certainly not too proud to ask for help on behalf of this important asset, on behalf of the town and on behalf of our borough.

“Given the scale of investment needed and the unprecedented financial pressures the council is under, there is a clear need to engage with other funding agencies and specialist heritage and pier related organisations to identify opportunities to provide financial support and ensure this project will deal fully with all current known maintenance, refurbishment, repair and replacement requirements."

Cllr Marion Atkinson, Sefton Council’s cabinet member for regeneration & skills, said: “I fully sympathise with all the businesses who have been affected by the closure and understand their frustrations while waiting for this independent report. But Sefton Council will always put the safety of the public and those companies’ employees first.

“We will continue to work with affected business owners, including the current pier concessionaire. The halfway concessionary store, which can be found attached to the side of Southport Pier remains open.

“Despite unwarranted speculation about the need for the closure, independent health and safety experts will confirm that the pier must remain closed until the full refurbishment project been carried out.

“This is an iconic but complex Grade II Listed structure that is hundreds of years old and is a thousand metres long. We have 56 miles of underfoot decking which needs replacing.

“It is also the case that the number and condition of piers nationally is diminishing, and the cultural and social significance of those remaining is increasing.

“Given the age, location and scale of historic structures of this nature, it is unsustainable for these to remain the sole financial responsibility of any Local Authority, as this report demonstrates in the case of Southport Pier.

“To me there is clearly a case to lobby Government for a national fund to address this pressure, and to ensure piers receive an ongoing, ringfenced, realistic and proactive maintenance budget allocation rather than having to reactively respond as seems to be commonplace nationally.

“Everyone, not just the Local Authority, has to be totally realistic and accept that this is not a task which will be finished in a matter of weeks or even months. Once a funding solution is identified, we will ensure the works are undertaken diligently and effectively in order to restore and protect Southport Pier for many years to come, but we cannot provide any firm timescales at present, until a solution to the funding gap is secured.”

Southport Pier will remain closed until the full refurbishment project is completed. Sefton Council said it is committed to engaging with all businesses and stakeholders affected by the ongoing closure.

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