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Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
Dave Arquati wrote: The point is that the people who have to suffer the negative consequences of the new road are not the ones who benefit from it. Maybe but not everyone can gain all the time. Much of the location of the road I was suggesting was on relatively undeveloped ground i.e. Harlesden near Scrubs Lane and Cricklewood near Staples Corner (although they are planning new development there). If you've been through Harlesden - well Willesden Junction is like the Clapham Junction of the North West and there's just a whole network of railways lines all over the place. As a result much of the area is industrial / warehouses. Some of the freight can come into London on trains, but then they will need lorries to distribute it around London (and also to places where there are no railway lines). A good road suitable for lorries would obviously be useful. The main section that would be a problem is north of Harrow Road until the A5. This area would probably be best tunnelled, with a junction to the A407, although it's difficult to know where to put this junction. Have you done the amount of research into congestion charging that TfL have done when considering where to draw the boundary? During my time as a minicab driver I probably drove more in those areas than any of them have. North Kensington is not that congested. Not even Ladbroke Grove, but if traffic is pushed from Ladbroke Grove onto Scrubs Lane (which it will be), then Scrubs Lane itself definitely will not be able to take the capacity. Harrow Road will also reach capacity between Ladbroke Grove (B450) and Scrubs Lane (A219) as traffic coming from Kensal Rise will be diverted. And the plucky little B451 - how the hell did that road get classified? It's a small residential road with not enough room for 2 vehicles to pass each other. What I'm saying is that the M25 proves that orbital routes in particular generate extensive numbers of new or longer car journeys. New or longer car journeys are not a particularly good thing, as they increase the damage to the environment, cause more air pollution and increase our dependence on oil. Or maybe other demographic factors, for example the decentralisation of industry (i.e. more businesses outside of the centre of London), and the high cost of living. If you have an issue with that final point then I suggest we drop this line of argument, because we won't get anywhere with it. No, I agree it would be good to cut pollution. We all want to cut pollution. And alternative fuels may eventually lead to reducing the need for oil. I agree that we should improve orbital public transport (as is now beginning with the ELL extensions and NLL/WLL improvements) - but orbital public transport can *never* compete properly with orbital journeys by private transport, because of the huge number of different origins and destinations involved. Therefore, don't build new roads which will generate new orbital journeys, because the majority of travellers just won't choose public transport for those journeys. Some will always use their cars. But ask commuters why they use their cars to get to work and many will tell you they have no choice - i.e. there is no viable alternative. No, you can't provide for every point but you can for the most common ones, for example those parts of Thames Valley where there is a lot of business. Driving to work can be stressful. The ORBIT multi-modal study recently carried out by the DfT said two things. Firstly, public transport improvements will make a negligible difference to traffic levels on the M25. Do you have a link to this study? Secondly, creating new orbital road capacity (e.g. widening the M25 or improving/providing other orbital roads) will generate enough new traffic within a few years to negate the benefit of the new capacity - and the only way to avoid that scenario is to toll the road. I never said that we should have the roads for free, and other countries like the USA toll their roads, however they pay very little in fuel duty whereas we pay a much higher amount, thus also paying to use the roads by that means instead. You brought it up before. You may not want to go to central London, but hundreds of thousands of other people do - and their journeys can be catered for by public transport, whereas growth in employment around motorways like the M25 cannot. And lots of people go into Central London not because it's their final destination but it's the only place they can change trains. Besides the fact that a lot of people use public transport into Central London because it's there. So if you do work in Central London then obviously you are going to choose that mode of transport. The catchment area of an employment or commercial destination built deliberately next to a high-capacity road is *much* wider than the narrow band alongside the main road that public transport would serve. You may attract some people to public transport along these roads, but only a small proportion of the people who use cars. People are also unwilling to change that many times on public transport - and even changes on a totally integrated service add time to the journey. It can also be extremely difficult to devise effective routes to link business parks etc. on a trunk route (which generally bypass town centres) with the town centres themselves. We need to look at a case in point. If we had a bus service that served the Western stretch of the M25 then it might pull off somewhere near junction 13 into a bus station, which might also have a shopping area attached to it. From there you could get another (local) bus to Staines or Egham, either to the town centre or to a place of work just outside. What you wouldn't want is a bus heading off the M25 right into the town centre of Staines, then going back to the M25 to serve the next point. It would cause far too much delay for those who do not want to stop in Staines (and would not be that convenient for Egham-based passengers either). An express bus serving the A30 may also pull into the same bus-station to provide a decent interchange. Obviously during peak hours these buses must run fairly frequently. If you have to wait 20 minutes for your change or even 15 minutes you'll go back to your car. If you have to wait 5 minutes it will probably be acceptable. And as for starting destinations, maybe I will do a part of my journey by car but then the ability to do that has been reduced as parking anywhere near a station has become discouraged with restrictions and excessive car-parking charges. That should be addressed too (i.e. park and ride). That's an interesting idea (which is used sometimes in this country too at places like Bicester and Banbury) but is it really relevant to the rest of the conversation? Sorry if I misunderstand. As far as reducing congestion overall, and part of an integrated transport system which includes taxis and private hire. |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
On 8 Aug 2005 03:45:31 -0700, "Earl Purple"
wrote: Dave Arquati wrote: .... Have you done the amount of research into congestion charging that TfL have done when considering where to draw the boundary? During my time as a minicab driver I probably drove more in those areas than any of them have. North Kensington is not that congested. Not even Ladbroke Grove, but if traffic is pushed from Ladbroke Grove onto Scrubs Lane (which it will be), then Scrubs Lane itself definitely will not be able to take the capacity. Harrow Road will also reach capacity between Ladbroke Grove (B450) and Scrubs Lane (A219) as traffic coming from Kensal Rise will be diverted. I live in that area and agree - it can get congested if the horsey army is on the clip-clop from Hyde Park out up Scrubs Lane, or if something goes pear shaped in Acton but otherwise it is just not congested. I think Dave's faith in TfL's research is mis-placed: the intended boundaries for CC2006/7 are probably well chosen for placing cameras but definitely not for the official aim of reducing congestion (as there is little enough of that). This is also shown by the other possible plans: boundary at HolPkAve, boundary one street up from LGr tube stn - these would be harder to enforce without cameras every 10 metres. It is about earning revenue for bonds to invest in PT, esp. buses. Admit that and Ken could move on to making payment easier for residents without having to sign up for that fleet car cover! What is annoying to me is excluding Sainsbury's and also excluding the soon-to-open v. massive White City shopping centre will lead to real congestion all around the imminent west CC zone. Can't preach car limits on the one hand while allowing the size of retail park which can only encourage it in the first place (notwithstanding an extra tube stn). -- New anti-spam address cmylod at despammed dot com |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
Colum Mylod wrote: On 8 Aug 2005 03:45:31 -0700, "Earl Purple" I live in that area and agree - it can get congested if the horsey army is on the clip-clop from Hyde Park out up Scrubs Lane, or if something goes pear shaped in Acton but otherwise it is just not congested. Yes, the name of the road becomes Wood Lane after the junction of North Pole Road (and not at the A40 which is where I always think of it changing name). It is this stretch that won't be able to take the capacity, particularly with the bus lane. It is notable that Willesden Junction station, just outside the new zone, is in Zone 3. The CG zone is generally zone 1. My proposed extension would keep it primarily zone 1. |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
(notwithstanding an extra [white city] tube stn)
That happens to be about 200 yards from the northern end of the previous station's platform If they had instead opened an exit at the north end of Shepherds Bush (H&C) to McFarlane road, or perhaps a covered footbridge past TVC (with an staff exit :D) there wouldn't be anyneed for a white city entrance. |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardensat night)
Earl Purple wrote:
Dave Arquati wrote: The point is that the people who have to suffer the negative consequences of the new road are not the ones who benefit from it. Maybe but not everyone can gain all the time. Much of the location of the road I was suggesting was on relatively undeveloped ground i.e. Harlesden near Scrubs Lane and Cricklewood near Staples Corner (although they are planning new development there). If you've been through Harlesden - well Willesden Junction is like the Clapham Junction of the North West and there's just a whole network of railways lines all over the place. As a result much of the area is industrial / warehouses. Some of the freight can come into London on trains, but then they will need lorries to distribute it around London (and also to places where there are no railway lines). A good road suitable for lorries would obviously be useful. Building new urban motorways is overkill. Even if you were to justify it just for freight, then you would still have the disbenefits caused by the eventual increase in car traffic on the rest of the road network. Anyway, I thought you wanted the completion of the original M1 extension to meet the motorway box. Although the route to Willesden Junction is, as you say, relatively underdeveloped, the area around the A40 elevated roundabout is not, and neither is the route north from Willesden. Your proposed route is a straight line which would require the demolition of swathes of Willesden; the original proposal followed the alignment of the North London Line but would still have required extensive clearance, especially at Brondesbury for the junction with the North Cross Route. The main section that would be a problem is north of Harrow Road until the A5. This area would probably be best tunnelled, with a junction to the A407, although it's difficult to know where to put this junction. Quite. Have you done the amount of research into congestion charging that TfL have done when considering where to draw the boundary? During my time as a minicab driver I probably drove more in those areas than any of them have. North Kensington is not that congested. Not even Ladbroke Grove, but if traffic is pushed from Ladbroke Grove onto Scrubs Lane (which it will be), then Scrubs Lane itself definitely will not be able to take the capacity. Harrow Road will also reach capacity between Ladbroke Grove (B450) and Scrubs Lane (A219) as traffic coming from Kensal Rise will be diverted. And the plucky little B451 - how the hell did that road get classified? It's a small residential road with not enough room for 2 vehicles to pass each other. I appreciate that you have local knowledge but you can't be at a variety of locations all day for a number of days to actually monitor the traffic, as TfL do. Working out how many cars will be displaced from one route to another and how much capacity that other route has is more of a modelling matter than an off-the-top-of-the-head thought. However, I don't really want to be drawn into a CCEX argument. I don't think it particularly helps our argument (that you think we should build urban motorways and I don't). My personal viewpoint is that since I live inside the extension zone and don't drive, I support the extension. What I'm saying is that the M25 proves that orbital routes in particular generate extensive numbers of new or longer car journeys. New or longer car journeys are not a particularly good thing, as they increase the damage to the environment, cause more air pollution and increase our dependence on oil. Or maybe other demographic factors, for example the decentralisation of industry (i.e. more businesses outside of the centre of London), and the high cost of living. Nope. If you could get hold of a copy of the ORBIT study (which no longer seems to be available online and is therefore probably only available in some libraries or from the DfT) then it points out that the M25 has driven the diversification of origin and destination points for these journeys, and has also extended the trips that people make. Decentralisation of industry around the edges of London is mostly consequence of the M25. If you have an issue with that final point then I suggest we drop this line of argument, because we won't get anywhere with it. No, I agree it would be good to cut pollution. We all want to cut pollution. And alternative fuels may eventually lead to reducing the need for oil. Hmm. You can't cut pollution by allowing an increase the total vehicle-km travelled by car. Alternative fuels are quite some way off and even then of dubious benefits (if, for example, we are talking about fuel cells, then the hydrogen has to come from somewhere). If you don't believe there is a need to limit the number of vehicle-km travelled, then once again I don't think this discussion is worth pursuing. I agree that we should improve orbital public transport (as is now beginning with the ELL extensions and NLL/WLL improvements) - but orbital public transport can *never* compete properly with orbital journeys by private transport, because of the huge number of different origins and destinations involved. Therefore, don't build new roads which will generate new orbital journeys, because the majority of travellers just won't choose public transport for those journeys. Some will always use their cars. But ask commuters why they use their cars to get to work and many will tell you they have no choice - i.e. there is no viable alternative. If a car journey can be performed in 60 minutes but the door-to-door public transport journey takes 45 minutes, then perhaps the commuter may choose public transport. If the car journey is reduced to 20 minutes because a new road has opened, there's rather less incentive to travel by public transport. That's a situation that leads to the commuter saying that public transport is "not viable" compared to the car. In other cases, providing an effective (or viable) public transport alternative may be essentially impossible because of the wide sets of origins and destinations for orbital journeys. No, you can't provide for every point but you can for the most common ones, for example those parts of Thames Valley where there is a lot of business. Driving to work can be stressful. You can provide public transport between centres of population and employment, but providing it to much smaller places is rather expensive and impractical. Orbital roads tend to grow a whole host of smaller employment centres along them. I agree that public transport alternatives should be provided whereever practically possible, but the reality is they will be unable to attract a significant proportion of commuters out of their cars at any reasonable level of expense. The ORBIT multi-modal study recently carried out by the DfT said two things. Firstly, public transport improvements will make a negligible difference to traffic levels on the M25. Do you have a link to this study? Unfortunately not, as explained earlier. The most I can find now is a rather more concise summary from the House of Commons Select Committee on Transport. http://www.publications.parliament.u.../38/38ap52.htm Secondly, creating new orbital road capacity (e.g. widening the M25 or improving/providing other orbital roads) will generate enough new traffic within a few years to negate the benefit of the new capacity - and the only way to avoid that scenario is to toll the road. I never said that we should have the roads for free, and other countries like the USA toll their roads, however they pay very little in fuel duty whereas we pay a much higher amount, thus also paying to use the roads by that means instead. Getting people to accept congestion charging is difficult enough; making them to support a new tolled urban motorway will be quite impressive. There's also still the issue of paying for the thing - the South Cross Route was priced at £419m in 1972 (equivalent to £3.4bn in 2002 using the RPI, but not taking into account the acceleration of property price rises or magnified construction costs of today) You brought it up before. You may not want to go to central London, but hundreds of thousands of other people do - and their journeys can be catered for by public transport, whereas growth in employment around motorways like the M25 cannot. And lots of people go into Central London not because it's their final destination but it's the only place they can change trains. Lots more people go into central London to get to their places of work. I doubt that any significant fraction are doing so because it's the only place they can change trains - I'd guess less than 1%, but I don't have any statistics to hand, if they are available. Besides the fact that a lot of people use public transport into Central London because it's there. So if you do work in Central London then obviously you are going to choose that mode of transport. Public transport to central London is there because it is a massive, concentrated employment centre and therefore PT can be effectively provided. Industrial parks along orbital routes are not concentrated employment centres and PT is therefore difficult and/or expensive to provide effectively. The catchment area of an employment or commercial destination built deliberately next to a high-capacity road is *much* wider than the narrow band alongside the main road that public transport would serve. You may attract some people to public transport along these roads, but only a small proportion of the people who use cars. People are also unwilling to change that many times on public transport - and even changes on a totally integrated service add time to the journey. It can also be extremely difficult to devise effective routes to link business parks etc. on a trunk route (which generally bypass town centres) with the town centres themselves. We need to look at a case in point. If we had a bus service that served the Western stretch of the M25 then it might pull off somewhere near junction 13 into a bus station, which might also have a shopping area attached to it. From there you could get another (local) bus to Staines or Egham, either to the town centre or to a place of work just outside. What you wouldn't want is a bus heading off the M25 right into the town centre of Staines, then going back to the M25 to serve the next point. It would cause far too much delay for those who do not want to stop in Staines (and would not be that convenient for Egham-based passengers either). You're missing a rather significant point - which is how the people on the M25 bus got onto it in the first place. You either need a large number of bus routes from each centre of population within the travel-to-work area for Staines, or you need feeder buses from the origin towns too. If it's the latter, as I suspect you are suggesting, then any journey to Staines that way will involve *at least* 2 changes. Let's say you are travelling from the centre of Reigate. You take a feeder bus from Reigate town centre to junction 8 of the M25 (10 minutes perhaps). You wait 5 minutes for a perfect connection to an express bus which serves, junctions 9, 10 and 11. It might be able to complete that journey in 25 minutes if it could average 40mph for the whole journey (which may be OK if it can achieve its top speed of 56mph on the motorway and do each stop quite quickly). You then get off and wait 5 minutes for another perfect connection which takes you into Staines town centre in 10 minutes. That perfect journey takes 55 minutes. The AA say it takes about 30 minutes by car. Therefore, the near-perfect PT alternative takes nearly twice as long. You may have provided a vastly superior PT service to the current offering, but it still can't compete with the car for orbital journeys. The additional problem is that this is a gross over-simplification. How likely is it that the commuter actually lives in Reigate town centre, or at least within a few hundred metres of the road between the town centre and the motorway? An express bus serving the A30 may also pull into the same bus-station to provide a decent interchange. Obviously during peak hours these buses must run fairly frequently. If you have to wait 20 minutes for your change or even 15 minutes you'll go back to your car. If you have to wait 5 minutes it will probably be acceptable. See above. Even perfect connections will extend the journey by at least 10 minutes. And as for starting destinations, maybe I will do a part of my journey by car but then the ability to do that has been reduced as parking anywhere near a station has become discouraged with restrictions and excessive car-parking charges. That should be addressed too (i.e. park and ride). With regards to the Staines example, I doubt you would drive to the motorway junction (9) and then catch the remaining two buses. Park and ride can be a good idea but parking at station car parks is somewhat a different beast. The lower the charges, the more likely it is that people will choose driving over other methods of getting to the station such as walking or cycling. The car appeals to our inner laziness, and if you currently have a 15-minute walk to the station but gained the choice of a 3-minute drive, then which would you choose? Adding parking at a station is also reasonably expensive, and the cost needs to be recouped somehow. At Beaconsfield, an extra deck of parking was created at the station, but car park charges remained the same - presumably enough latent demand was released just with the availability of new capacity, let alone with reduced charges. Or do you mean park-and-ride on the edge of a town in order to get to the station itself? That may seem a good idea, but I think it's difficult to pull off in practice, as you are introducing an extra change of mode. Taxibus services (e.g. Bicester) are probably a better solution for that sort of journey, as require fewer modal changes, less tarmacing of Green Belt or open space at the edge of town, and let the commuter leave their car at home for the whole journey with subsequent environmental benefits. That's an interesting idea (which is used sometimes in this country too at places like Bicester and Banbury) but is it really relevant to the rest of the conversation? Sorry if I misunderstand. As far as reducing congestion overall, and part of an integrated transport system which includes taxis and private hire. OK, that's fine... but it doesn't really provide anything for the original point which was regarding the possible construction of urban motorways. I agree that an integrated transport system should be implemented which includes taxis - I think the example at Bicester (taxis operating like a scheduled hail-and-ride service in the peaks, and as a low cost on-demand taxi service offpeak) is an excellent approach which should be adopted much more widely. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
On Mon, 08 Aug 2005 19:52:24 +0100, Dave Arquati wrote:
Your proposed route is a straight line which would require the demolition of swathes of Willesden; This is a bad thing ? -- "Access to a waiting list is not access to health care" |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
Greg Hennessy wrote: On Mon, 08 Aug 2005 19:52:24 +0100, Dave Arquati wrote: Your proposed route is a straight line which would require the demolition of swathes of Willesden; This is a bad thing ? South of the A407 (All Souls Avenue etc) is actually quite nice. Chapter Road etc wouldn't really be missed (in my opinion). Park Avenue north of the Jubilee Line is still a fairly new development. After that we hit the disused railway and just take our road along it. My own preference would be to tunnel parts of this road. 2 lanes in the tunnel in each direction may suffice. (It's enough on the North Circular at Edmonton). Certainly it doesn't need to be an actual "motorway" with a hard shoulder. |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
"Earl Purple" wrote in message
oups.com... Greg Hennessy wrote: On Mon, 08 Aug 2005 19:52:24 +0100, Dave Arquati wrote: Your proposed route is a straight line which would require the demolition of swathes of Willesden; This is a bad thing ? Most of Willesden is very expensive and posh. If you're thinking of Willesden Junction, that is actually in Harlesden. After that we hit the disused railway and just take our road along it. That railway isn't disused. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardens at night)
Most of Willesden is very expensive and posh. If you're thinking of
Willesden Junction, that is actually in Harlesden. There is no postcode for Harlesden and NW10 is officially "Willesden" though it covers also Harlesden, Park Royal and Brent Park / Neasden. And parts of Willesden Green are in NW2 which is Cricklewood. So it's difficult to draw a boundary and say "that is Willesden" unless you use the NW10 postcode area. Postcodes are alphabetical between NW2 and NW10. I don't know how Golders Green gets to be NW11 though or what else it might stand for, so a separate postcode for Harlesden would have to be NW3½ (to fall between Hampstead and Hendon). After that we hit the disused railway and just take our road along it. That railway isn't disused. Don't know what it's used for, but if it's just for freight they might be better placed in lorries on a road. Clearly there are no passenger trains along that line (and if there were would there be enough passengers? After all, where does it link to? Hendon Thameslink?) |
Orbital transport & urban motorways (was Warwick Gardensat night)
Earl Purple wrote:
After that we hit the disused railway and just take our road along it. That railway isn't disused. Don't know what it's used for, but if it's just for freight they might be better placed in lorries on a road. I think I'm having a transport planning embolism. -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
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