Garden Bridge: Tough questions for £175m Thames project
- Published
The proposed Garden Bridge across the River Thames has run into trouble after changes in the government and the end of Boris Johnson's run as London mayor.
New Transport Secretary Chris Grayling is due to decide whether to extend a £15m government underwriting of the £175m project until September 2017.
But tough questions are being asked in Whitehall about the footbridge and its public value, Newsnight understands.
The Garden Bridge Trust said it hoped ministers would continue to support it.
The 366m (1,200ft) tree-covered Garden Bridge, external, whose construction is yet to begin, would span the Thames between Temple and the South Bank.
Mr Grayling is understood to be keen to study all the options ahead of his decision, which needs to be made imminently to allow the trust - the charity responsible for building the bridge - to file its accounts this week.
'Shut bridges not brilliant'
The project in central London was championed by Boris Johnson as London mayor and by George Osborne as chancellor.
The concerns in Whitehall about the project, which is due to receive support from the taxpayer to the tune of £60m, focus on two areas amid a feeling that tough questions have not so far been asked:
Whether it is right to commit taxpayers' money at a challenging time for the public finances when there is no guarantee that the bridge will be completed. There are concerns that the government could incur further liabilities in the future
Whether it is right to have a bridge that will be closed on occasion, although the Trust says this will be "a maximum of 12 evenings", external a year. "You need bridges where people can actually walk over them," one Whitehall source told Newsnight. "Bridges that are shut for parties are not brilliant"
Sadiq Khan, the new mayor of London, has already said there can be no more support from Transport for London or the Greater London Authority beyond the £30m they are contributing. That is half of the public funds.
A spokesperson for the London mayor told Newsnight: "Sadiq Khan supports the Garden Bridge but he has been absolutely clear that no more TfL or GLA money will be spent on it."
The Garden Bridge Trust has confirmed to Newsnight that it is seeking a meeting with the transport secretary and it hopes the government will continue to support its plan.
'Lone voice'
But the trust has indicated to Newsnight that the future of the bridge lies in the government's hands because the private sector, which is due to provide more than £100m of the funding, cannot underwrite the project if the transport secretary decides to withdraw support.
The bridge, which was originally conceived by the actress Joanna Lumley as a memorial to Princess Diana. may become a victim of the changing of the guard in Whitehall at London's City Hall.
George Osborne was a great supporter of the bridge on the grounds that it would showcase great British design and attract extra visitors to London.
Mr Johnson became a strong supporter after being lobbied by Ms Lumley who has known him since childhood.
The foreign secretary is now described in Whitehall as a "lone voice" in the cabinet in favour of the bridge.
Mr Johnson's successor as London mayor became a reluctant supporter of the bridge on the grounds that it would be more expensive to cancel the project given that £37m of public money has already been spent.
But Newsnight understands that Sadiq Khan is unlikely to shed any tears if central government withdraws its support for the bridge.
His plans for London have focused on building more bridges to the east of Tower Bridge because they would do more to boost economic development.
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