Improvements planned to make airport roads safer

Work to improve the roads within Jersey Airport is due to begin this week.
Ports of Jersey (PoJ) said it was planning to install traffic calming measures to reduce vehicle speeds and provide safer crossing routes for pedestrians.
PoJ said this work would include a chicane on the road leading to the departures building, new speed cushions, improved lighting and new road markings.
Airport operations director Ashley Maggs said the measures would "protect people while they are moving around the site".
He said: "As the project continues, we will be creating clear separation of vehicles and pedestrians, improved cycle routes and a covered storage area for cycles near the departures terminal."
He said a planning application for the area around the former hangar was scheduled to be submitted within the next month and the curved blue wall in the arrivals parking area would be removed in the spring.
People leaving the arrivals terminal would then find open space with views of the runway and sheltered areas for bus and taxi users to wait for onward transport, he added.
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