The Balearic government has approved the environmental assessment for the new 2.8 km bypass near s'Alqueria Blanca. The tender could start soon — offering a chance for less through-traffic, greater safety and dedicated pedestrian and cycle paths.
New bypass for s'Alqueria Blanca: Less noise, more space for cycling
The 2.8-kilometre link between Ma-19 and Ma-4012 moves a step forward
In the early morning, when the bakery at the Plaça Major in Santanyí still fills the air with the smell of fresh bread, you can hear the familiar but tiring roar of cars in s'Alqueria Blanca. Around 11,000 vehicles pass through the small village every day, compressing everyday life: schoolchildren, pedestrians with shopping bags, the bus that rumbles along the country road. Now there is movement — and on the map.
The planned bypass will be about 2.8 kilometres long and will connect the Ma-19 south of the village directly with the Ma-4012. The Balearic government's environmental assessment has been approved. That is more than a bureaucratic tick: with the green light the island council can probably put the works out to tender as early as December. For residents, this means that the idea that has been in talks and plans for years is now becoming concrete.
What stands out: the project considers more than just cars. Separate footpaths and cycle lanes are planned for each direction. In a community where afternoon walks and bike rides across the fields are part of everyday life, this is not a detail. It is an invitation to make traffic flow more smoothly while at the same time creating safe routes for everyone — parents with prams, older people, commuters on bikes.
The change is noticeable before the first excavator arrives. Less through-traffic in the village means less noise on the streets, fewer exhaust fumes in front of houses and more relaxed conversations in the cafés. Traffic on the Ma-19 and Ma-4012 will then flow outside the narrow village axes — actually a simple idea that can have a big impact in daily life.
Of course a bypass is not a magic formula. Good planning must respect the landscape and agriculture, take watercourses and farm tracks into account and also preserve the look of the area. Residents who tend their olive trees on the edge of the fields or drive their goats to pasture in the morning do not want new routes to cut through their routine. That is why it is important that local knowledge is included during construction: which planting fits, how to minimise dust and noise during the building phase and where to sensibly plan strips for trees and hedges so that the road does not look like a wound.
A tangible advantage is obvious: safe cycle paths encourage short trips by bike — to school, to the market or to the station. That can not only further reduce car traffic but also enliven the village. In Santanyí people know the small things: children cycling to school, older people more often taking the walk to the bar on the village square, cycling groups at the weekend riding along the coast without worry.
What we should hear more often in public debate is the focus on reuse: when a road relieves traffic flow, free spaces and opportunities for upgrading arise — space for short footpaths, greening, better crossings. A village gains quality of life when not every park bench is disturbed by engine noise.
The approval is an occasion to help shape things locally now. Suggestions from the neighbourhood for tree species, crossing points or noise-reducing measures should be heard. When the tender comes, it will become clearer how extensive the measures are — and whether local craft businesses and construction companies can be involved. That creates jobs locally and keeps know-how in the community.
In the end it is a simple promise: a 2.8-kilometre stretch will not change everyday life overnight, but it can make it better. Fewer cars through the heart of s'Alqueria Blanca, more space for people on foot and on bikes — that is a prospect that already brings a smile to the Plaça Major. When planning and neighbourhood come together, Santanyí benefits not only in traffic terms but also on a human level.
Outlook: The tender could start in December. Anyone with ideas for planting, crossings or noise-reducing measures: now is the right moment to put them forward.
Read, researched, and newly interpreted for you: Source
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