logo
Road improvements to boost safety for Wolverhampton school pupils

Road improvements to boost safety for Wolverhampton school pupils

BBC News08-04-2025

Road improvements to boost safety for pupils and parents as they walk to school are set to begin.Work is due to start near Manor Primary School on Ettingshall Road and Foster Avenue in Wolverhampton on Wednesday.The move comes after two collisions that involved pedestrians during drop-off and pick-up times at the school happened in the past three years, a city council review found.Councillor Qaiser Azeem said: "Creating a safer environment will encourage more families to walk to school, improving healthy lifestyles, cutting carbon emissions and benefitting air quality."
He added: "It will improve safety by slowing traffic and ensuring roads near the school are kept free from vehicles parking dangerously."Measures include school zone road markings, new signs, speed cushions, dropped kerbs at crossings and waiting restrictions in Ettingshall Road and Foster Avenue.A temporary three-way traffic signal will be in place on Ettingshall Road on Friday and 14 April at the Foster Avenue and Nally Drive junctions.Ettingshall Road will be closed on 15 April between the junctions of Nally Drive and Foster Avenue from 08:00 GMT to 16:30 with diversions in place.The road will also be closed again during the same times on 16 and 17 April.
Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Family's joy and dread as dad is plane crash survivor but sibling is missing
Family's joy and dread as dad is plane crash survivor but sibling is missing

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Family's joy and dread as dad is plane crash survivor but sibling is missing

Two of the 53 British nationals on board the doomed Air India flight to Gatwick were brothers Ajaykumar Ramesh, 35, and Viswash, 40 - sadly only one is believed to have made it out alive The British brother of the man believed to be the only known survivor of the tragic Air India plane crash who was sat just a few rows back from his sibling has been pictured for the first time. On Thursday brothers Ajaykumar Ramesh, 35, and Viswashkumar, 40, boarded the doomed flight after having been in India on a business trip. The Boeing jet crashed shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad Airport in Gujarat at around 1.40pm (0810 GMT), officials said. ‌ While Viswashkumar - seated in 11A by the exit - survived, his sibling who was sat in seat 11J is feared dead. Devastatingly, injured Viswash has been begging from his hospital bed: "Find Ajay, you must find Ajay." ‌ Last night, relatives of the brothers gathered at the family's home in Leicester to comfort the brothers' mother who is said to be too grief-stricken to speak. Younger brother Nayankumar Ramesh, 27, told MailOnline"It's a miracle at least one of them survived." Hours after the crash, Nayankumar said the family were desperate for news about what happened to Ajay, as his phone was still ringing out when they called it. He said: "We're hoping he's survived and been taken to hospital as well." Asked how the family are wrestling with the tragedy of one brother surviving and the loss of the other, he gestured to his sobbing mother, Manibai Ramesh, behind him. "That's your answer", the brother said. "We're just baffled, baffled." Detailing their final days Nayankumar said his older siblings were in India on a business trip concerning their family business. Viswashkumar was formerly the sole director of textile company RMV Fashion, which closed down in 2022. ‌ Astonishing footage showed Viswashkumar with visible injuries hobbling away from the scene of the crash. He reportedly sustained injuries to his chest, eyes and feet. Police said Viswashkumar had 'managed to escape by jumping out the emergency door'. Brother Nayan said his brother was in disbelief at how he got out alive, saying on the phone: "I have no idea how I survived or exited the plane. When he was on the runway, my dad called him. And Viswash said, "oh, we're going to take off soon," he said. 'And then literally like two minutes later, he video called my dad as he crashed. He said, "our plane's crashed, I don't know where my brother is. I don't see any other passengers. I don't know how I'm alive, how I exited the plane. All he was worried about on the phone was telling us "find Ajay, you must find Ajay"," Nayankumar added. Speaking to local media from his hospital bed, Viswashkumar said his brother had been sitting on a nearby row, adding: "I can't find him anymore. Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed. It all happened so quickly,' he added. "When I got up, there were bodies all around me. I was scared. I stood up and ran. There were pieces of the plane all around me. Someone grabbed hold of me and put me in an ambulance and brought me to the hospital."

Antiques Roadshow guest gushes 'I can't believe that' as value of inherited item unveiled
Antiques Roadshow guest gushes 'I can't believe that' as value of inherited item unveiled

Edinburgh Live

time5 days ago

  • Edinburgh Live

Antiques Roadshow guest gushes 'I can't believe that' as value of inherited item unveiled

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info A guest on Antiques Roadshow was utterly astounded by the hefty valuation given to his Rolex watch by expert Richard Price. During a rerun of the much-loved BBC show, which aired on Sunday 8th June, Brodie Castle served as the backdrop for a host of valuable discoveries. The episode showcased a man who presented Richard with a 1960s Rolex GMT-Master that once belonged to his uncle. Richard, examining the timepiece closely, told the owner: "All Rolex collectors refer to these things by their reference number," and "You know as well as I do because it says so on the dial that it's a GMT-Master." The owner shared that he had held onto the watch for about 32 years after inheriting it from his uncle, reports the Express. (Image: BBC) He guessed that the watch might have been a present to his uncle in the 1960s, leading Richard to investigate its provenance further. Richard clarified: "It's the reference 1675, which is the classic GMT-Master when you said 60s, I think we could fairly safely say 1960 to 1961, so that all fits in." Upon closer examination, Richard was delighted to discover the watch was unmodified, pointing out that many watches are often altered during servicing, which can disappoint collectors. He detailed: "They would've changed the bezel and they would've changed the dial with an upgrade," and then remarked: "You would've had it back thinking, 'Oh, it looks like new'. Collectors hate that, it's absolutely original, spot-on." The expert was then left a tad disappointed after inspecting the watch further, noting that it sported a jubilee bracelet rather than the original oyster type. He informed the downcast owner: "It's a Rolex product of course, but it says 'Made in the USA'. So perhaps he specified that he did not want the oyster bracelet, he wanted a jubilee bracelet and they put this one on for him. "Which sort of detracts from it a little bit, probably detracts from it by a couple of thousand pounds." (Image: BBC) The guest's spirits dipped further when Richard valued the watch at what would have been £300 to £350 in the early 60s. Reacting to the valuation, the guest said ruefully: "Wish he bought more." However, Richard had some uplifting news, announcing that the Rolex is likely worth £12,000 to £15,000. The guest was left utterly gobsmacked as applause erupted around him. Visibly moved, he uttered: "I can't believe that, can't believe that." Antiques Roadshow is streaming now on BBC iPlayer.

Push to keep reviving Wolverhampton's architectural history
Push to keep reviving Wolverhampton's architectural history

BBC News

time07-06-2025

  • BBC News

Push to keep reviving Wolverhampton's architectural history

A city's historic buildings are undergoing a revival and one local photographer, Ian Hughes, said: "We should be shouting about it from the rooftops."Talking about Wolverhampton, he admitted he was once "one of the naysayers who felt it was a dump" - but has found a love for the city's architectural history and said: "There's a lot to celebrate in Wolverhampton."Emma Purshouse, editor of the Black Countryman magazine, also believes the city has some amazing said: "If it was Stratford or the posh parts of London, they'd have been preserved and made part of a tourist trail." Mr Hughes started going on walks around the city two years ago, taking photos of the buildings as he has more than 10,000 images and said the city was now "definitely a phoenix rising from the ashes".One recent discovery which stuck in his mind was a large brick building near the canal."Nobody seemed to know what it was," he said - but he eventually found it had once been a butter and cheese Hughes said it was a "lovely building, totally overgrown and desperately in need of repair" and he felt it had an interesting story to tell. Mr Hughes said he did not know why Wolverhampton "chose to knock things down" but it was nothing new or unique to the said the Victorians "just swept everything away" to create the modern city centre and their buildings had in turn been replaced after World War Two."In the 1950s, councils up and down the country did exactly the same," he Mr Hughes is not angry about the city's lost history and said: "People made what they think were the right decisions at the time."These buildings were never built to last forever and be part of history, they were built with a purpose and those purposes are long, long gone." Ms Purshouse said she believed it was "easier to knock things down than preserve them" but there were many examples of interesting architecture still in said her favourites included the Great Western pub, with its cobbled street "because it feels like you've just stepped back in time into a little Victorian pocket of Wolverhampton" and the Lychgate Tavern off Queen's some old buildings were "hidden" behind modern shop fronts, with others it had been "easier to knock things down than preserve them", she added. Ms Purshouse was appointed Wolverhampton's first poet laureate during the coronavirus pandemic and, like Mr Hughes, spent a lot of time walking around the said while some buildings had been lost, there were also good examples of historic buildings being preserved, such as the Albion former corn mill has been turned into flats but its appearance has been also hoped the city's former eye infirmary would be treated sensitively when the old NHS site was is planning consent to turn it into flats, a special needs school and an eating disorder city council said the Victorian building and former nurses accommodation would be restored as part of that work and it was encouraging the owners to move the project Purshouse said she has happy to see buildings change their use if they can "keep the architecture and keep the feel of the things". Mr Hughes said there were also encouraging signs for the future of Wolverhampton, with projects such as the planned redevelopment of the former Beatties site will be turned into a mixture of apartments and shops and the city council said it was in "regular contact" with the owners of this building too, "to offer support and encourage action to move things forward". The councillor responsible for development in Wolverhampton, Chris Burden, said the city was "full of beautiful architecture" and the council took the preservation and restoration of heritage buildings "extremely seriously".The authority pointed to a number of other buildings which have been brought back into include the Grade II listed Civic Hall and Wulfrun Hall, now known simply as The Halls, which were refurbished at a cost of £ former Royal Hospital, which closed in 1997, has also been brought back into use as flats for people over the age of projects still in the works include turning the former Chubb Locks factory into a four-screen cinema and the restoration of the central council said it was also working with the owners of the city's other empty buildings to bring them back into use and improve how they look from the outside. While it might be romantic to think Wolverhampton's forgotten buildings could all be brought back into use, Mr Hughes believes people should be realistic about the future of town shopping habits changing, he said: "Towns as we knew them are gone, they're never coming back."But he said if developers were prepared to put in the money and the effort, the centre of Wolverhampton "could become what it used to be". Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store