Black Dalek
Active member
- Jan 19, 2004
- 283
Keep the taxi's out the front. Gives it a great New York type buzz.
For the life of me, I can't work out how I drive to work now (Preston circus to Gardener St).
The 5 or 5A.
How terrible for you. If your journey is long drawn out, dreary and nonsensical you'll finally know how people feel when they listen to your 'comedy'.
4/10 - a somewhat tortured analogy but bitchy quote marks rescue it
For the life of me, I can't work out how I drive to work now (Preston circus to Gardener St).
And at 1am going home?
Knock down the bit between Queen's Road and Fredrick Place! All of it!
Queens Road isn't being more pedestrianised.
Don't the proposals show the top of Queens Road with a widened pavement and a narrower road with cycle/car/bus traffic becoming one way ?
Sadly I was thinking much the same about Queens Road and Surrey St. - realistically without that extra space for bus and taxi stands being created, none of the options currently on offer make a shred of difference - they just shift the problems a few yards down the road.
It all smacks of moving the deckchairs around on the Titanic, or a typical planning 'fudge', whereby the overall and overriding objective gets lost in too much detail.
If it is, not massively so.
There's the retention of two lanes, plus a cycle lane where the opposite lane is. In fact, at present that particular part of Queens Road is one-way. I can't see where extra accidents would occur over and above where they might at present.
I wouldn't call pavement half a car lane wider 'pedestrianised'.
On the council website it mentions the pavement on both sides will be widened to 3 metres , walking up or down on the left hand side will be more riskier with cyclists riding on the pavement next to the cycle lane.
On the council website it mentions the pavement on both sides will be widened to 3 metres , walking up or down on the left hand side will be more riskier with cyclists riding on the pavement next to the cycle lane.
The reason that the existing bus stands are so cramped is of course because the area of Surrey St., bus stands and Queens Road was only ever intended to act as a turning circle for the trams that ran up Queens Road to the station - it was never built to be large enough to handle modern (larger) buses and motor vehicles. Even creating it in the first place required some buildings to be demolished - originally the buildings ( nos. 71, 72 and 73 ) came up right to the edge of Trafalgar St. with the area under the Port Cochere being the principal roadway (before the Port Cochere was constructed). The location of the bus in the photo below shows where the original 1924/25 road opening was created. The area being demolished in the photo took place in 1935.
So in demolishing a few more buildings, we are simply carrying forward a scheme of road widening that was carried out at numerous other location in the city (London Road through Preston Village, Edward St., Lewes Road viaduct) during the 20th C.
People do get very precious these days when it comes down to demolishing things, but if you want to get REAL change it's really the only way to go about it.
Ride your bike? Walk? Maybe you won't be late every day if you did not drive!
Dunno, hadn't thought that one through.
Anyway, I thought you were somewhere further out than Preston Circus.
And at 1am going home?
Are these changes going to happen soon?