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Garden Bridge faces being scrapped after Sadiq Khan’s refusal of financial guarantees

A garden bridge planned to stretch across the Thames is likely to be scrapped after London Mayor Sadiq Khan announced he would not provide financial guarantees for its construction.

A continuing shortfall in funding for the proposed botanical crossing means that the charity leading the project will not be able to carry out construction.

Mr Khan said in a letter to Labour peer Lord Davies, who chairs the Garden Bridge Trust, that he would not

Despite three years of talks, Mr Khan was not able to secure the necessary land use agreements for the bridge, designed by Thomas Heatherwick, which was supposed to run from Temple to the South Bank.

“I have always been clear that not a penny more of taxpayers’ money should be allocated to the project,” Mr Khan said in his letter today.

“I am simply not prepared to risk a situation where the taxpayer has to step in and contribute significant additional amounts to ensure the project is completed.”

 

The previous mayor, Boris Johnson, championed the project after it was devised by Joanna Lumley, and later backed by George Osborne and former Richmond Park MP Zac Goldsmith.

Osborne and Johnson committed £60m of public money to the bridge, hoping to raise the remaining costs from corporate donations but continued opposition from neighbours and a housing association meant construction was constantly postponed and costs soared.

As planning permission for the bridge expires December the original timetable appeared impossible, Mr Khan said, and while the project was not officially scrapped, the withdrawal of public funds effectively means the end of the project.

Labour MP Margaret Hodge, who was commissioned by Mr Khan to investigate the cost-effectiveness of the project, suggested in a damning report, published earlier this month, that the project be scrapped completely.

“I believe it is better for the taxpayer to accept the loss than to risk the additional demands if the project proceeds. In the present climate, with continuing pressures on public spending, it is difficult to justify further public investment in the garden bridge,” the report said.

The estimated £60m bridge would cost more than £200m, with £37.4m of public money already spent with no construction to show for it, according to the report.

Ms Hodge also found that Garden Bridge Trust had secured only £69m in private pledges, the last of which came in August 2016, leaving a £71m gap.

Mr Khan said this money had already been spent before land agreements talks had closed.

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