Key Points
- Welsh Water says the tunnelling work for the controversial pumping station in Hailey Park, Llandaff North, is now expected to resume in autumn 2026 after being paused last September.
- The delay is linked to equipment problems, with the company saying machinery was not available to keep the project moving.
- The scheme has already been delayed several times, and the latest setback means completion is now at least another nine months away.
- The project has long been opposed by residents, park users, community groups and councillors over concerns about smell, noise and biodiversity.
- The pumping station is intended to serve wastewater needs linked to development in Cardiff’s north-west, including Plasdŵr.
Llandaff (Cardiff Daily) July 4, 2026 — A controversial sewage pumping station project in Hailey Park, Cardiff, has suffered another delay after Welsh Water said the tunnelling work cannot restart until autumn 2026 because of an equipment issue.
As reported by Wales Online, the latest setback means the scheme, which had already been paused last September, will not be completed for at least another nine months. The development has become one of the most contentious local infrastructure projects in Cardiff because of the disruption it has caused and the continuing concerns from people living nearby.
Why is the scheme delayed again?
Welsh Water said the problem is linked to the availability of machinery, which has prevented work from resuming as planned.
The company had originally expected the tunnelling phase to finish in April 2025, but the project has been pushed back repeatedly.
The latest delay adds to a history of interruptions that have affected the build over a long period. According to the report, the tunnelling work stopped last September and has still not restarted.
What is being built at Hailey Park?
The project concerns a sewage pumping station and related tunnelling work at Hailey Park in Llandaff North. The scheme is linked to sewer infrastructure needed to support Cardiff’s wider growth, including the Plasdŵr development in the north-west of the city.
Wales Online has previously reported that the pumping station was proposed to handle wastewater from the new suburb, which has been a major driver of the scheme.
That connection has helped explain why Welsh Water considers the site important from an infrastructure point of view.
Why has the project caused controversy?
The plan has drawn sustained criticism from residents, community groups, park users and councillors, who have raised concerns about smell, noise and possible harm to biodiversity.
The park is seen by many local people as an important green space, so the prospect of heavy construction has remained unpopular.
The project has also been the focus of public protests and legal challenges in earlier reporting on the scheme. That long-running opposition has made each fresh delay part of a wider dispute about how Cardiff should manage growth and infrastructure.
How has Welsh Water responded?
Welsh Water’s position is that the works are necessary and that the project remains the preferred solution for managing wastewater in the area.
In earlier reporting, the company said it had chosen the park site after assessing options for the route and infrastructure needs linked to future housing growth.
The company has also previously said it would try to reduce disruption while work is under way, although those assurances have not removed local anxiety.
The latest delay may reduce immediate construction disturbance, but it also prolongs uncertainty for nearby residents.
How does this affect local residents?
For people living near Hailey Park, the practical effect is that the period of construction disruption has now been extended further into the future. That means continued uncertainty over when noise, machinery and site activity will end.
It also keeps the broader dispute alive, because the project remains unfinished and the same concerns are likely to return when work eventually restarts.
For park users, the delay may be welcome in the short term, but it does not resolve the underlying disagreement about the scheme itself.
Explore More Llandaff News
Gas Leak Stops Station Road Works; Llandaff North 2026
Llandaff North Beat Bonymaen for Principality 2026 Cup Final (Llandaff North, 2026)
Background of the development
The pumping station has been controversial for years because it sits within a public park and is tied to a major housing-led expansion in Cardiff. Earlier coverage shows the project has faced protests, legal action and repeated criticism from local campaigners.
The current delay follows a series of earlier setbacks, including halted work and problems that have already pushed back completion beyond the original timetable.
In that sense, the latest pause is not an isolated issue but part of a much longer planning and construction dispute.
Prediction
If the project restarts in autumn 2026, local residents are likely to face another period of disruption from construction noise, traffic and restricted park use.
The controversy may also continue to shape local debate about development in Cardiff, especially where housing growth depends on new infrastructure.
For campaigners, the delay may strengthen their argument that the scheme has been poorly managed over time. For Welsh Water and Cardiff’s wider planning needs, the task will be to finish the project while limiting further friction with the community.
