The first images a bridge dubbed the 'street in the sky' connecting North Glasgow to the city centre have been released.

A planning application has been submitted for the pedestrian and cycle bridge has officially been submitted as part of the £250million Sighthill Transformational Regeneration Area.

The new bridge will be far more 'attractive and fit for purpose' than the existing structure.

Planners have added landscaping on both the northern and southern approaches forming new civic spaces that allow free flowing movement.

Construction will begin in mid-2019, with completion expected in Summer 2020.

The bridge span will be just over 58 metres (191 feet), and its width varies between 20 – 7.5 metres.

It will weigh 2420 tonnes and its structure is a steel box girder with a reinforced concrete composite desk slab.

The approach taken to its design means that the bridge will need minimal maintenance and will also not require painting therefore minimising disruption to the motorway. The parapets are designed to emphasise key views across the city skyline yet obscure direct lines of sight to the motorway below.

The paved bridge deck is an hour-glass form that varies in width from 20m at the widest to 7.5m at its narrowest.

Councillor Susan Aitken, Leader of Glasgow City Council and Chair of the Glasgow City Region City Deal Cabinet, said: “This new bridge will form a gateway to both Sighthill and the city centre. For far too long, neighbourhoods just on the periphery of the city centre have been forgotten or abandoned.

"Sighthill has typified this neglect, cut off from the heart of the city by the M8. But its regeneration will deliver a new neighbourhood within a short walking or cycling distance from the city centre, creating new communities along the Canal Corridor and delivering for the people and economy in the north of Glasgow.

"If we are serious about building sustainable, balanced and inclusive communities we need to expand how we think of the city centre, to incorporate those communities on its fringes. The new bridge will be more than just a crossing over the M8 – it will be an emblem of the new Sighthill, connecting it into wider city life and helping revitalise North Glasgow.”

Once the Sighthill TRA is complete, it will have transformed approximately 50 hectares of land and parkland, a large area of which was contaminated due its industrial past, when a number of heavy manufacturing factories were based in the area.

An enhanced neighbourhood - immediately beside the city centre, just 15 minutes’ walk from George Square - will have been created for existing members of the local community and for new residents choosing to move to Sighthill, with almost 1000 new homes of various tenures.

Some of the other features of the regenerated Sighthill will include a new community campus school, and a new road bridge over the Glasgow-Edinburgh railway line improving the connections between Sighthill and neighbouring communities.

The parkland and the greenspace of the area will also be significantly improved, and a new public square, new shops and businesses will come to Sighthill. Sighthill will be reconnected to the Forth and Clyde canal at the Pinkston basin, with a fantastic canal terrace transforming the area.

Land remediation - now complete - has made the delivery of these new features possible.