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#1
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How about spending some of the money that is currently being extorted
from car drivers on something completely radical like building new underground roads similar to the ones in Bruges Belgium. We are constantly being stuffed for more any more cash to subsidize harebrained council schemes none of which improve our lives at all. Surely if engineers 120 years ago can build the London underground railway system, we in the 21st century can build an underground road system. For those that have not visited Bruges, let me describe a car journey to that city. We arrived on the Sea Cat (The Vomit Comet) at Ostend and drive 13 miles to Bruges where you are directed down a tunnel some miles out of the city. After driving some distance underground, you are directed into giant car parks and take the lift back to daylight, where you arrive in the middle of a huge town square with Bars and restaurants around the edge, and the latest shops within a short walk. No Stress at all. Compare this with a trip to London where parking meters earn more that a worker's minimum hourly wage and everything is designed to give the maximum stress and the minimum value. We need some new thinking on this. Public transport is not the answer, and not everyone can cycle to work. Jeff |
#2
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#3
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![]() "Robin May" wrote in message ... I think something altogether less radical would be much more helpful. How about Newham council spending money on resurfacing **** roads (like the road to my house, which seems to be about one step above a dirt track) and fixing potholes, rather than using it to create completely new road hazards (speed bumps) that damage cars and make roads much more difficult to cycle along. Exactly - and if we must have so many 'traffic-calming' installations in this country, how about making them from good old kerbstones and asphalt, instead of bloody expensive brick paviours with fancy raised garden beds. Where I live there are a number of locations where a busy two-lane main road has been narrowed to a single lane with chicanes and obstacles (either on both sides or by directing the traffic from one direction into the opposite traffic flow). These so-called calming measures may work effectively when there is a heavy traffic flow during the day but at other times they are positively inviting head-on collisions, as boy racers speed through the constriction at 40mph+ during the evenings and at weekends, forcing other motorists, cyclists and pedestrians to dive for cover. Have any of these traffic planners ever been out to observe the potential carnage that they are inflicting upon road users? Even the construction companies installing them reckon that they are lethal and more dangerous than installing simple, cheap speed humps. |
#4
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"Jack Taylor" wrote in message
. .. Have any of these traffic planners ever been out to observe the potential carnage that they are inflicting upon road users? Even the construction companies installing them reckon that they are lethal and more dangerous than installing simple, cheap speed humps. What would the construction companies know? Every traffic measure is monitored by the responsible authority six months before and after its installation. If they were lethal, they would not be still installing them. -- 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 |
#5
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![]() "John Rowland" wrote in message ... Every traffic measure is monitored by the responsible authority six months before and after its installation. If they were lethal, they would not be still installing them. Really, John? Just what does this "monitoring" consist of? Checking traffic volumes electronically or actually spending a day (or more) physically observing the way in which drivers are using the modified carriageway? I have a view of the site from my window and have *never* seen anyone monitoring traffic flows during the working day. I have little doubt that no such "monitoring" has occurred at my local installation, which consists of four reductions in carriageway width from two lanes to a single lane within 200 yards (narrowed equally on both sides, so that traffic passes through in the centre of the carriageway). Half an hour observing would have revealed that, despite the traffic flow priority signs, motorists hurtle through the chicanes at excessive speeds with scant regard to oncoming vehicles with priority. Originally there was a raised, paved area at the narrowest point of each chicane and they were relatively effective - recently they have removed the raised area because it was grounding ambulances and now the installation is ineffective and downright dangerous. |
#6
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On Thu, 9 Oct 2003 23:20:28 +0100, "John Rowland"
wrote: "Jack Taylor" wrote in message ... Have any of these traffic planners ever been out to observe the potential carnage that they are inflicting upon road users? Even the construction companies installing them reckon that they are lethal and more dangerous than installing simple, cheap speed humps. What would the construction companies know? Every traffic measure is monitored by the responsible authority six months before and after its installation. If they were lethal, they would not be still installing them. Well they are still using 6 inch wide overbanding between the 3 strips of tarmac on the A6 out of Derby at Allestree golf course. Successfully Murdered about 6 people in the 80's so they dropped the speed limit to 30 from 50. Then painted diagonal white stripes all over the middle of the road, then they stuck bollards down the center too. But the excessive overbanding is still on the carriageway - just where most people place their offside wheels. One little dab of the brakes when it's just damp and the car steers like a tank! No offside braking at all so it does a 90 degree turn straight up the verge. they have moved all the lamp posts 20ft back from the road. The one I hit is still bent after 20 years - they moved it back along with all the others. -- Peter Hill Spamtrap reply domain as per NNTP-Posting-Host in header Can of worms - what every fisherman wants. Can of worms - what every PC owner gets! |
#7
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How about spending some of the money that is currently being extorted
from car drivers on something completely radical like building new underground roads similar to the ones in Bruges Belgium. We are constantly being stuffed for more any more cash to subsidize harebrained council schemes none of which improve our lives at all. Surely if engineers 120 years ago can build the London underground railway system, we in the 21st century can build an underground road system. For those that have not visited Bruges, let me describe a car journey to that city. We arrived on the Sea Cat (The Vomit Comet) at Ostend and drive 13 miles to Bruges where you are directed down a tunnel some miles out of the city. After driving some distance underground, you are directed into giant car parks and take the lift back to daylight, where you arrive in the middle of a huge town square with Bars and restaurants around the edge, and the latest shops within a short walk. No Stress at all. Compare this with a trip to London where parking meters earn more that a worker's minimum hourly wage and everything is designed to give the maximum stress and the minimum value. We need some new thinking on this. Public transport is not the answer, and not everyone can cycle to work. Jeff Hello, Jeff. As a reasonably frequent visitor to Brugge, I think your recollection is a little incorrect. The car park you describe is in the T'zand square. It is a fairly normal underground car park as seen elsewhere in the world including London. The car park is very conveniently located, being only a five minute walk from the city centre, but is not anything special. The only difference is that the entrance and exit into the car park is from the sides of a fairly short 250 metre road tunnel which passes under the T'zand square. The entrances and exits to the car park have very sharp curves indeed! Buster |
#8
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![]() Buster wrote: How about spending some of the money that is currently being extorted from car drivers on something completely radical like building new underground roads similar to the ones in Bruges Belgium. Or investing more in a good reliable PT system. For those that have not visited Bruges, let me describe a car journey to that city. We arrived on the Sea Cat (The Vomit Comet) at Ostend and drive 13 miles to Bruges where you are directed down a tunnel some miles out of the city. After driving some distance underground, you are directed into giant car parks and take the lift back to daylight, where you arrive in the middle of a huge town square with Bars and restaurants around the edge, and the latest shops within a short walk. No Stress at all. None? You jest. Now had you jumped on Eurostar and simply crossed platforms in Brussels it is likely you would have ha a much more pleasant journey. Just think, not having to queue at the ferry port or having to drive. You even admit the crossing is less than enjoyable. Instead, you could relax with a book and a meal, or enjoy a snooze. We need some new thinking on this. Public transport is not the answer, It goes towards providing it. More roads don't. and not everyone can cycle to work. Many more can. They could try walking too. Did you note the number of cycles in Bruges, and how they could use one-way streets in the opposite direction to motor vehicles? And did you see all the bike racks - thousands outside the railway station where buses and trains meet each other. And did you see the number of buses and the cheap all-town daily tickets or the low cost all Belgium train passes? As a reasonably frequent visitor to Brugge, I think your recollection is a little incorrect. The car park you describe is in the T'zand square. It is a fairly normal underground car park as seen elsewhere in the world including London. The car park is very conveniently located, being only a five minute walk from the city centre, but is not anything special. Quite. John B |
#9
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![]() "JohnB" wrote in message ... Buster wrote: How about spending some of the money that is currently being extorted from car drivers on something completely radical like building new underground roads similar to the ones in Bruges Belgium. Or investing more in a good reliable PT system. For those that have not visited Bruges, let me describe a car journey to that city. We arrived on the Sea Cat (The Vomit Comet) at Ostend and drive 13 miles to Bruges where you are directed down a tunnel some miles out of the city. After driving some distance underground, you are directed into giant car parks and take the lift back to daylight, where you arrive in the middle of a huge town square with Bars and restaurants around the edge, and the latest shops within a short walk. No Stress at all. None? You jest. Now had you jumped on Eurostar and simply crossed platforms in Brussels it is likely you would have ha a much more pleasant journey. Just think of the 40 mile drive to find the nearest open station, the £12 a day parking when there, the 2 hour wait on a deserted ice cold platform for the delayed intercity to get to London that costs twice as much as Eurostar and arrives at the other side of London lugging your bags down onto the underground (now rush hour after the delay). Ah how pleasant and I still haven't made it to the station to get the Eurostar. As the 40 miles I would need to drive (due to all the local stations being closed due to track maintenance) is only a few miles shorter than I would need to get to a port I don't see me letting the train cause the strain. Though I'm less than 40 miles from an airport so I would hop on a flight for 1/2 the cost of a train fare to London and use the remaining 1/2 to hire a car for the time I'm over there. |
#10
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![]() Depresion wrote: "JohnB" wrote in message ... Buster wrote: How about spending some of the money that is currently being extorted from car drivers on something completely radical like building new underground roads similar to the ones in Bruges Belgium. Or investing more in a good reliable PT system. For those that have not visited Bruges, let me describe a car journey to that city. We arrived on the Sea Cat (The Vomit Comet) at Ostend and drive 13 miles to Bruges where you are directed down a tunnel some miles out of the city. After driving some distance underground, you are directed into giant car parks and take the lift back to daylight, where you arrive in the middle of a huge town square with Bars and restaurants around the edge, and the latest shops within a short walk. No Stress at all. None? You jest. Now had you jumped on Eurostar and simply crossed platforms in Brussels it is likely you would have ha a much more pleasant journey. .....I'm less than 40 miles from an airport so I would hop on a flight for 1/2 the cost of a train fare to London and use the remaining 1/2 to hire a car for the time I'm over there. So where is the airport in Bruges and what's the flight fare? John B |
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