Shanklin Cliff Lift

Footbridge to Shanklin Cliff Lift ‘significantly and unexpectedly deteriorated’

This just in from the council, in their own words. Ed


The normal pre-season inspection undertaken last week has revealed the condition of the supporting steelworks of the footbridge at the top of the lift have significantly worsened since the last inspection and the lift cannot be opened until remedial works are carried out.

Urgent investigation
The council is urgently investigating whether anything other than a full replacement of the bridge can be done to ensure the lift can be used for at least part of the summer season.

One of the challenges for the council is that the operating plant is nearing the end of its serviceable life so an investment into replacing the bridge without also committing to the replacement of the plant would not be the best use of the council’s limited financial resources. The combined value of these works is estimated at nearly £750,000

“Completely shocked at the results of the inspection”
Councillor Shirley Smart, Executive member for tourism, said:

“The council’s normal programme of works to ready the lift for opening at Easter was well in hand and whilst some further deterioration of the bridge was expected it is fair to say that we are completely shocked at the results of the inspection.

“Public safety has to be our prime concern and although we will look at all options to get the lift open for the seasons I am not optimistic about its chances.

“It is ironic the scale of deterioration has been discovered only a few weeks before council was due to consider a report to release funds to replace the bridge and the lift plant at the end of the 2015 operation period.”

Bus service
A bus service operates on Shanklin Esplanade every half an hour between 9.58am and 5.28pm during the day (apart from between 1pm and 2pm) between 20 June and 31 August which members of the public can use to travel into the town centre, the railway station or the bus station.

Image: © With kind permission of simonhaytack

Advertisement
Subscribe
Email updates?
18 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
mike
30, March 2015 2:34 pm

Err? the half-hourly bus service (Shanklin Steamer) does not start until 20 June!

check your facts
Reply to  mike
30, March 2015 4:17 pm

yes – as they clearly say in the story…

retired Hack
30, March 2015 3:21 pm

This is what contingency funds are for.

Lord Bermondsey
30, March 2015 3:45 pm

Who actually uses this contraption other than a few old fogies from up north on holiday?

Council, save your money for something more worthy.

check your facts
Reply to  Lord Bermondsey
30, March 2015 4:15 pm

A hell of a lot of people use it, especially on Regatta Night.

It makes a profit of around £5000 per year.

The bridge was last replaced in the 80s I believe. The plant machinery dates back even further.

£750k to replace both is an absolute bargain.

Caconym
Reply to  check your facts
30, March 2015 4:51 pm

£750,000 / £5000 = 150 years to break even.

J H
Reply to  Caconym
30, March 2015 5:13 pm

If you do not support the visitors to the Island we can all go to sleep in the knowledge that there will be a loss of jobs in the tourist industry which is of vital importance to many.

Neglected repairs must be undertaken (not the fault of the present administration but the lack or foresight in years in the past

Chris Quirk
Reply to  Caconym
30, March 2015 5:34 pm

The actual profit last year was £62,077, and I am led to believe they have not yet put it out to competetive tender so the numbers are purely estimates, but the estimate to make it safe is around £270K not £750K, so breakeven just over 4 years.

Lord Bermondsey
Reply to  check your facts
30, March 2015 8:11 pm

@check your facts….a hell of a lot of people? One annual regatta night and a coach load of obese northerners once a week hardly constitutes a hell of a lot.

Get them on that dotto choo-choo or better still make them walk. Let the council use the money saved on subsidising something worthwhile like the floating Bridge.

Chris Quirk
30, March 2015 5:19 pm

The need for the work to be carried out on the Shanklin Cliff Lift should not be a surprise to the IOW Council. In October 2012 they had a survey carried out that identified potential issues with the bridge, and in May 2013 had further specialist surveys carried out which clearly identified the scale of the work required and recommended that the work be carried out within… Read more »

Adam
Reply to  Chris Quirk
30, March 2015 6:45 pm

As the cries of “no money” are unlikely to go away and make any repairs, if at all, very minimal, perhaps now is the time revisit the redevelopment of the spa car park site, as, if I recall correctly, a new lift was part of the redevelopment plans?

Mrs Retired Hack
30, March 2015 6:02 pm

I’ve found a photo of a bright orange dotto train on Shanklin seafront in 2008, packed to the gunnels with happy holidaymakers.
http://www.isleofwightattractions.co.uk/IOWimages/ShanklinTrain.jpg
Seems like the obvious short-term fix, if one could be found laid up in a shed somewhere.

Luisa
30, March 2015 7:08 pm

The (temporary) reinstatement of the dotto train or a community-run mini bus with small charge equal to that of the Lift would surely be a good idea? Shanklin could get a community bus service out of this at a fraction of the cost of fixing the Lift. I’m not a Shanklin resident so I don’t know if the above is a good idea or not but certainly… Read more »

OldFogeyWhoCantWalkFar
Reply to  Luisa
31, March 2015 4:17 pm

I for one DO live in Shanklin and DO use the lift – it’s the only way that I can gain access to the Esplanade. Whenever I’ve used the lift, it has usually been full, used by people of all ages and types (people in wheelchairs, families with pushchairs, carers and their charges, overladen families tired but happy after a day on the Beach, or just plain… Read more »

Lord Bermondsey
Reply to  OldFogeyWhoCantWalkFar
31, March 2015 9:48 pm

…the Council should have been saving its pennies towards cost of repairs…

What sort of planet are some of you living on?

Mark Francis
31, March 2015 9:53 am

Dotto train = Mobile traffic jam.

patrick mckay
31, March 2015 8:19 pm

“Surprise?”. Please remind me who was Council Leader last September when discussion on Pier spending was removed from council business. Oh yes, the councillor who wants to be Inderpendent MP for all the Island; or was that a plot?

Martin Sims
22, November 2015 5:14 am

The cliff lift is the only me and my mother could access the sea front and beach as we both have limited mobilty and use sticks the steps are now closed off and I can’t do slopes.

reCaptcha Error: grecaptcha is not defined