Lost tunnel monument recreated 92 years on

David HumphreysLocal Democracy Reporting Service
LDRS Image shows a reinforced concrete cylindrical monument on a plinth. It has been highly polished to resemble the original granite. Visible are the words "Monument to the Mersey tunnel recreated in 2025".  LDRS
The monument has been recreated and put where the original one stood

A missing monument marking the history of the Mersey Tunnels connecting Liverpool and the Wirral has been recreated.

Two identical circular were designed by tunnel architect Herbert Rowse and from 1934, when the Queensway tunnel opened, they stood at the Liverpool and Birkenhead entrances.

But the one in Liverpool was removed in the 1960s.

Described by Merseyside metro mayor Steve Rotheram as a "lost cultural asset", it has now been reconstructed with the help of funding from the Liverpool City Region combined authority.

Two Art Deco toll booths have also been restored as part of the project.

Rotheram said: "The Queensway tunnel is one of the defining engineering achievements of our city region's history, and the monument that marked its construction stood as a symbol of the ambition and confidence that shaped Liverpool."

LDRS Image shows Steve Rotheram, in a suit, stepping out of a green Art Deco toll booth. LDRS
A 1930s Art Deco toll booth, being visited here by Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram, has also been restored

The monument has been engineered using reinforced concrete, polished to closely resemble the original black granite used in the 1930s.

Simon Lightwood MP, the roads and buses minister, said: "Our historic landmarks tell the story of the communities they serve, which is why it is great to see Liverpool's iconic Queensway tunnel monument reinstated."

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