Eleanor Maslin & Leanne BrownEast Yorkshire and Lincolnshire

BBC A woman with a full brown fringe with her hair up in a bun. She is wearing a black blazer and white top and behind her are screens analysing traffic in a city.BBC

Kerry Ryan from Hull City Council said the congestion from the Drypool Bridge closure was “less than anticipated”

Officials at Hull City Council (HCC) say they are “quite pleased” with the level of traffic congestion caused by a bridge closure, despite complaints from businesses.

Drypool Bridge was shut on 15 September until November as part of a “major repair and strengthening programme”, HCC said. The A63 Myton Bridge is also closed on several weeknights.

Darren Ingram, who works at welding supply shop BOC Gas & Gear, said: “It’s not going to be good for business at all, people are just not going to come.”

Kerry Ryan, head of transport and traffic management at HCC, said: “We appreciate there’s a lot of inconvenience, we’re quite pleased with the level of congestion that we’re seeing.”

“The congestion is less than what we anticipated,” she added.

Diversions have been put in place to minimise, including a temporary park and ride site on Holderness Road and changes to traffic light timings.

A man with grey short hair and a grey and brown short beard and moustache is looking to the side with a serious expression. He is wearing a black jacket and you can see a workshop blurred behind him.

Darren Ingram from BOC Gas & Gear said the congestion from the bridge closure can add 45 minutes onto journeys

Despite the measures, businesses have expressed concerns about the impact it has had.

Mr Ingram, whose shop is located on Great Union Street, said: “You can add an extra 45-minutes on your journey sometimes coming from one end of the city to another.

“We don’t know how we’re going to cope, especially with our deliveries. It’s going to affect the business in a big way.”

David Dos Santos, from The Big Coffee, also on Great Union Street, shared similar concerns.

He said: “It’s already bad as it is, never mind with the bridge shut.

“We do quite a few deliveries here and there so we’ll probably get stuck in it as well.”

A man with short brown hair styled as a quiff is wearing a black polo shirt that says 'Mobile Retail on it'. Behind him you can see a white mobile van. He is looking to the side and has short brown stubble and a moustache.

David Dos Santos works at The Big Coffee in Hull, a manufacturer of mobile coffee vans

Councillor Mark Ieronimo, portfolio holder for transport and infrastructure at HCC, explained plans put in place to aid congestion.

He said: “They include using AI and our knowledge of how that optimises the traffic signals to keep traffic moving.

“There will also be a temporary bus gate outside the BBC building to allow buses to flow around the city better and encourage more people to travel in by bus.”

He added: “I know it’s frustrating in the short term but there will be long term benefits.”

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