With all the discussion about Wightman Road recently, I came across an article originally published on the London Living Streets website, by the campaign group's vice-chair, Emma Griffin. It sets out the case for low-traffic neighbourhoods, using evidence collected over many years.
Orford Road, Walthamstow - once traffic-clogged, now a social space
Low-traffic neighbourhoods can be life-changing for the residents who live in them. Since the neighbourhood improvements in Walthamstow Village in 2015, people are walking and cycling more, children play out, air pollution has improved and life expectancy increased.
More information on what low-traffic neighbourhoods are and how they work is available here.
But bold traffic plans such as this are often introduced amid concern and opposition. This series of blogs explores these questions and presents research that helps fill missing gaps and tackles any misunderstandings.
Here we examine concerns that low-traffic neighbourhoods may divert traffic onto main roads leading to increased congestion and air pollution.
Experience reveals that predictions of traffic problems caused by low-traffic neighbourhoods almost always fail to materialise, and that significant reductions in overall traffic levels across an area can happen as a result of people making a wide range of behavioural responses to the new traffic configurations.
The most comprehensive study of the phenomenon of disappearing or “evaporating” traffic was carried out by Sally Cairns, Carmen Hass-Klau, and Phil Goodwin in 1998 and followed up in 2002. See below and here.
This brought together experience from 70 case studies of roadspace reallocation from general traffic, across 11 countries, with opinions from 200 transport professionals. It shows that traffic does not behave like water moving through pipes, finding an easier path as another narrows. Instead it is a force of human choice, driven by people making all sorts of different decisions when driving conditions change. The respondents in the Cairns study, for example, changed their mode of travel, chose alternative destinations, or the frequency of their journey, consolidated trips, took up car sharing or didn’t make the journey at all.
In half of the case studies, over 11% of the vehicles which were previously using the road or the area where roadspace for traffic was reduced, could not be found in the surrounding area afterwards.
What’s really encouraging, is that one of the most significant behaviour changes following implementation of low-traffic neighbourhoods has been a shift to more walking and cycling.
Just one year after the implementation of schemes in Outer London, including Waltham Forest, residents were walking 32 minutes and cycling on average 9 minutes more per week. This ongoing London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and University of Westminster study is available below and here.
As Rachel Aldred, reader at University of Westminster and one of the study’s authors says, “new infrastructure often takes some time to have an effect on active travel, but in this case we are seeing positive results after only one year”.
This demonstrates that if councils improve the conditions for walking and cycling (and make driving just a little more inconvenient), people take the bait very quickly. And as time goes on, as active travel becomes embedded in lifestyles, more will follow leading to long-term change over an entire area.
Low-traffic neighbourhoods are not, therefore, about rewarding one group of people while punishing another: they are part and parcel of shrewd city planning, making long-term decisions about how people travel.
And the potential for change is massive: currently around 1.6 million, or 22%, of all car trips made by London residents every day are under 2km and could therefore be walked (2.7 million more could be cycled). See below and here.
Any measures for converting these car journeys to active modes should be of paramount importance for London boroughs – not just to reduce traffic volumes but to improve the health of communities through activity and lower air pollution.
A 2018 study by King’s College London (more below and here) linked the boost in active travel in Waltham Forest’s low-traffic neighbourhood with increased life expectancy as a result of improved air quality, increased activity and shift to active travel on the school run.
This research also found that more than 51,000 households in Waltham Forest are no longer living in areas with dangerously high levels of air pollution compared to a decade ago.
So what about the main roads? Even with traffic evaporation, main roads will shoulder some extra traffic. But evidence suggests the impact of this isn’t as big as some fear. Waltham Forest’s research shows that bus journey times (on main roads) have not significantly increased following introduction of LTNs. That research is available here, chapter four.
King’s College London research, based on modelling work where traffic volume is used as one of the inputs to determine air quality, suggests that there has not been a decrease in air quality on main roads following introduction of LTNs. That report is here, page 8-9.
Main roads were also designed to take the majority of traffic, so can absorb increases in traffic better than their residential counterparts. These streets have wider carriageways, with buildings set further back. They also have better crossing facilities and safer junctions.
A small increase in traffic on a main road is also less noticeable than the transformation brought about by a dramatic reduction on a residential street: of a child riding a bike to school, of walking to the local shops, or hearing birdsong again. And given the majority of people in London live on residential streets, these sorts of improvements could be life-changing for millions.
For an illustration of how non-local traffic can degrade the environment and safety of residential roads, watch this video Stoke Newington, London. https://twitter.com/mum_on_bike/status/1138444799139356683
Counts on main roads in Waltham Forest also showed that traffic was more spread out across the day following introduction of the low-traffic neighbourhoods. In fact, maximum peak hour flows were lower on the main roads. In other words, the traffic Armageddon that some expected never arrived.
All that said, any increase in traffic is hard to accept if you live on a main road or send a child to school there. As a result, main roads also demand urgent attention.
One solution, being adopted in many cities across Europe and in Britain (for example in Glasgow), is to reconfigure main roads as urban “boulevards”. London also has the benefit of the Healthy Streets Approach to help deliver this sort of change. Urban boulevards could feature, for example:
Wider road traffic reduction policies are also necessary and increasingly possible, including:
These wider policies, plus redesigns of main roads and low-traffic residential schemes should all be addressed in unison, even if they are delivered over different timescales.
The alternative — of proponents of different approaches falling into opposing camps – will only result in inaction, or watered-down schemes and lengthy delays. And there isn’t time for this.
London’s population is set to grow from around 8.6 million today to 10 million in 10 or so years. There simply isn’t space for all these people to fit in cars on roads. Climate change, air pollution and the health impacts of inactivity are also at crisis point, requiring immediate and drastic action. As the research listed here demonstrates, low-traffic neighbourhoods are one of the easiest, quickest and cheapest ways to take on this challenge.
Tags for Forum Posts: traffic
This is a great idea but unfortunately there is zero political will to do it. Look at the unfolding disaster on Wightman Road. The Labour council will never budge on this so there needs to be a political shift if anything meaningful is to be achieved. In Harringay ward unfortunately we have gone backwards politically - the loss of the two libdem councillors (me being one of them) in 2014 means there is no healthy local democracy to drive change.
Until we have a council who are open to driving change, are ambitious and courageous then we are stuck with what we have.
There is political will in Haringey to be granted money from the TfL Liveable Neighbourhoods scheme, to the extent that Turnpike Lane has been twinned with Crouch End.
A Liveable Neighbourhoods Conference was held at Alexandra Palace. Which is in Haringey. The opening words were spoken by the Leader of the Council.
I picked up on three themes from the day in order to create a successful scheme 1) transparency, 2) inspiring leadership 3) carry your public with you - perhaps the trials in Bow came too soon after the conference to pick up on these ideas .
I note that Haringey LibDems have recently been boasting of their success in having motions passed, which by definition means the Labour leadership agrees with them on the Climate Emergency, LGBT education and school streets. Is that what is meant by "zero political will"?
Haringey Council we've found, over and over again to talk a great game about this sort of thing. But we see very little in the way of action. Living Wightman has proved that the residents of the Ladder want the road closed. All their research shows that it is entirely viable and the right thing to do. Of course there was some opposition, but the community started using the streets again and the decrease in pollution was an absolute revelation. The road was closed for six months with very little negative effect. Green Lanes took the slack and, as has been shown time and time again, traffic lessened as a result of out-of-borough drivers finding a new route. It's time our councillors started working for us and putting our health first. As far as parking on Green Lanes goes, I've just walked up and down it, and the cars parked outside the shops look exclusively like the ones owned by the shop owners. That, or all the customers of the shops are *very* well heeled in their Mercedes, BMWs, Range Rovers and Teslas.
When Wightman Road was closed there was an initial surge of traffic on Turnpike Lane but as all evidence shows this eases over time when drivers find alternative routes, use alternative means of transport or decide not to make the journey. Walthamstow is a good example of how that happens. So let's push for Wightman Road to be closed permanently for through traffic.
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