Sorry, full aticle here.
It's going to be amazing, Mr Cossey says so, but then again they said that about the skip didn't they.

THE next phase of ambitious work to Colwyn Bay’s sea defences get underway this month.
Heavy machinery will be used to test the ground conditions along the seafront at Colwyn Bay, in preparation for the next part of the Waterfront Project which will see the promenade raised by one metre.
Large piling rigs will be used to dig boreholes on the beach and the promenade between Porth Eirias and the Victoria Pier, with trial pits also being dug with an excavator.
The work, which will start next week, will take two to three weeks to complete with work limited to weekdays between 8am and 6pm.
Cllr Mike Priestley, Cabinet Member for Environment, Roads and Facilities said: “These tests are an essential part of our preparation for the next stage of the Waterfront Project, but we appreciate that the work is being carried out during the holiday period so we’ll do all we can to minimise disruption.”
Cllr Brian Cossey, for Colwyn Ward, said: “I just hope people will be patient and see that the end result will be worth it. You only need to see how people have taken to the new beach to see how important this is.”
Designs are also being drafted for an improved link between the beach and the town centre and will go on display this autumn.
Cllr Cossey added regeneration work in Colwyn Bay was all the more important in the light of a recent report by the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), highlighting economic deprivation in many seaside towns.
He added: “In time, it will be finished, and we’ll have an amazing promenade to be proud of.”
