Status
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Construction scheme
(future) |
Where
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To
upgrade the N14 between Manorcunningham
and Lifford, County Donegal, and hence
to Strabane by building an entirely new,
offline dual-carriageway.
|
Total
Length
|
c18 km / c11 miles
|
Dates
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2010 – Scheme had been
proposed, but put on hold at that time
Dec 2017 – Feasibility report published
for current incarnation of scheme
Feb 2019 – Route options published
Jan 2020 – Preferred
route announced
2023 – Included in the draft County
Donegal Development Plan 2024-2030
2024 – Scheme approved
in principle by Department of Transport
2028 – Possible start of construction
(as of Jul 2024)
|
Cost
|
€180-220m (as of 2022)
- to be funded via the TEN-T Priority
Route Improvement Project, Donegal
|
See
Also
|
General area
map
Official
web site on scheme
|
Click
here to jump straight down to updates
for this scheme.
The N14 forms part of the main road from Dublin
to Letterkenny, starting as the N2 before
becoming the A5 in County Tyrone. At Strabane
the N14 forks off and continues to Letterkenny.
The existing N14 was built around the year 1800
and is a low quality road with many tight bends,
poor visibility and lots of side accesses. This
scheme will see a completely new high-quality
dual-carriageway built offline; the current road
will remain in place but revert to local use.
The new road will have only four intermediate
junctions between Manorcunningham and Lifford –
two left-in/left-out junctions near Drumoghill,
a grade-separated junction at the R236 serving
Raphoe (north) and a grade-separated junction at
the R264 serving Raphoe (south) and Lifford. It
will terminate on a roundabout on the existing
N15 south of Lifford, where a short
connector road is planned to join it to
the proposed A5 in Northern Ireland.
An overview design of the road can be seen here.
The scheme is one element of three schemes
being taken forward together as a single
project, the other two being the N13/N15
Ballbofey/Stranorlar Bypass and
N56/N13 Letterkenny
to Manorcunningham upgrades.
Updates
26 Jul 2024: The Irish Cabinet yesterday
finally approved this scheme, later than
anticipated in the previous update. The scheme –
and the two other Donegal TEN-T schemes which
have been approved too – will now move to the
planning and procurement processes. Subject to
all going to plan with these processes,
construction is anticipated to get underway in
2028, i.e. four years from now. The government
has also said that it will be revising the cost
estimates in due course, as the current estimate
of €180-220m dates from 2022 and the rate of
construction inflation has been quite high in
the past few years. With thanks to Paul
McCloskey for giving me the heads up about this
decision.
8 Mar 2024: On 22 February - the day
after my last update - Transport Infrastructure
Ireland issued
their 2024 financial allocations for local
councils. It included an allocation of €2.02m
for the three TEN-T projects in Donegal (this
one and two others). A different press release,
issued
on 14 February, confirmed that (as we knew) the
Business Case was submitted in June 2023, and
that the assessment of this is still ongoing.
There is still no word on that – I am not sure
why, as it had been expected by now.
21 Feb 2024: Yesterday the Irish
government announced
funding for various cross-border schemes, and
this scheme (and the two other Donegal Ten-T
schemes) got a mention. No specific funding
amount was given, other than linking it to the
€600m contribution to upgrading the A5 in
Northern Ireland, so it sounds like the
commitment is to continue the planning process
for the scheme. So I don't read this as a plan
to construct in the near future. And, off
course, the southern end of the scheme at
Lifford won't work without a road to connect it
to on the Tyrone side, and at present there is
still no funding to build the part of the A5
(Phase 2) that it would connect to. This may
mean a temporary terminus at Lifford would be
necessary if it the N14 upgrade happened before
the A5 south of Strabane was upgraded. Such a
terminus would probably be the planned
roundabout on the N15 south of Lifford, with the
bridge over to the A5 following later. There is
still no word on the Irish government signing
off on the business case for the scheme,
something that we had expected before the end of
2023. Certainly nothing has changed on the
official web site
in recent months.
6 Oct 2023: As with the first two
Donegal schemes I covered, the first point to
make is that this is my first attempt to follow
a scheme outside Northern Ireland, so if I have
made any basic errors please be gentle and let
me know roads at wesleyjohnston.com! At this
stage the scheme has a detailed design (see here)
but construction is unlikely to begin before
2026. The next couple of years will need to see
the scheme taken through the process to obtain
planning permission. The scheme also needs a
business case signed off, which is expected
sometime this year. The current cost estimate is
€180m-€220m at 2022 prices but this is likely to
rise due to the recent surge in construction
inflation. A reminder that the excellent JP
Dowling over at Irish
Motorway Info maintains information on new
roads across the whole of the Republic.
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