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Engineering work on EU-funded quay wins acclaim

Image of Western Quay before the modernisation

Western Quay before modernisation

Image of Western Quay after the modernisation

Western Quay after modernisation

The transformation of the Western Quay at North Shields has won a prestigious civil engineering award.

It was named as the North East’s best civil engineering project costing over £4 million at the Institute of Civil Engineers’ annual Robert Stephenson awards.

The Western Quay project is the largest to have been funded through the European Fisheries Fund (EFF) in England, which contributed £2 million towards the £6 million modernisation scheme.

Work to completely refurbish the existing 125-year-old quay, which had been in a state of decline for 50 years, was completed in October 2010.

It created a berthing facility of 275 metres for up to 40 fishing boats and also provided easy access to services such as fuel and ice. These will be of particular benefit to the large number of vessels visiting the port between September and March due to the lucrative prawn fishing grounds in the North Sea.

The project also helped to safeguard over 500 jobs in the catching, landing and processing sectors of the North East fishing industry.

Alongside the grant from the EFF other public funding for the project was provided through the regional development agency, local council and port authority.

More than £234,000 has also been granted through the EFF to help fish processing companies in North Shields. The Apply for funding section contains more information about the money available through the EFF.