Bold Seagull
strong and stable with me, or...
KINGS ROAD (MAIN SEAFRONT) CYCLE LANE
The council are going to turn the southern lane of the two lanes (westbound) into a cycle lane as a 'temporary Covid 19 measure'. Starting from the Aquarium roundabout (soon to be lighted crossroads) all the way to King Alfred. I'm going to try and give the good and bad bits of this having got two businesses on that road. First up, pedestrian crossings. In a letter from the council, sentence three states that cyclists must obey the way of the road and stop at pedestrian lights. That will not happen and people will get mown down. Fact!. Easing of the busy footway. The path is busy and with cyclists going fast it is dangorous and so the cycle lane needs extending. There you go, I'm all for making the cycle path bigger. Traffic. The west bound lanes get busy. Can two lanes fit into one, probably not but will have to. Emergency services. Most of Kings Road has a central island and so cutting it down to one lane with heavy traffic most of the time means emergency vehicles (I see at least 4 an hour) wont get through. How will cars, vans and lorries move out of the way? West St. The junction with Kings Road & West St on the west bound side is already one lane. How do you cut one lane down to two?
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In cities that have embraced keeping the car out or to a minimum, have found business increases. As an example in Utrecht a proposal was out to lose 100 car parking spaces leading to a shopping area for a cycle lane and cycle parking or reduce by a couple of spaces and improve the highway - it was the businesses that overwhelmingly voted for the cycle option because it increases trade.
Maybe we’re just not ready for such blue sky thinking yet. Perhaps it is still attractive for the jewel in the city’s crown; the seafront, to have 4 lanes of cars on it constantly, to have polluting traffic crossing the clock tower crossroads with pavements barely fit for purpose for pedestrians.
They’ll come a light bulb moment when we do realise that ditching the car isn’t the end of the world, or the end of commercial enterprise. A bit like working from home suddenly has big businesses saying ‘hang on, our staff are still being really productive maybe even more so than at the office’. In challenging times for retail and tourism and commercial enterprise generally, embracing change may actually be the shot in the arm these things need.