Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

TFL scores Harringay's connectivity as amongst best in North London

Extract from PTAL map showing Harringay  where red equates to central London connectedness levels

Tipped off by a recent Jim Waterson/London Centric's post, I spent a few minutes exploring TFL's PTAL scoring map (Public Transport Access Levels ). Used mainly for assessing appropriate housing densities in planning, it also offers an interesting insight for non-professionals, if used with care.

I say 'if used with care' because in some respects it's a rather crude tool. It scores the public transport connectedness of every location in London depending on walking time to the nearest public transport node, frequency and speed of service.

Extract from full PTAL map with Harringay circled in red. 

Most of central London is 5 (shaded red). As you travel outwards the scores descend down to the lilacs of 1 and cross-hatching of 0. Harringay ranges from 5 to 2. Fair enough as far as it goes, but is still offers some odd results. For example, just above the Passage on Hewitt Road, you're in PTAL 2 territory: walk 2 minutes down the hill to number 130 and suddenly you're in PTAL 5. And again the bottom part of Allison Road is in PTAL 4, whereas the same part of Hewitt Road, equally near to the bus stop outside Salisbury Promenade is PTAL 3. 

So, a useful tool, but I think it needs reading with some finesse. It also reminds us that despite the through-traffic drawbacks of Harringay, we live in a very well connected neck of the woods as far as public transport in concerned.

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THANKS for this Hugh.

It images show particularly the density of bus-stops.

Is not one implication, that this infrastructure could be used much more effectively and efficiently … if the density of traffic other than buses could be thinned down?

And also that—between TfL and Haringey's half-baked, hide-bound Highwaymen—the authorities are unwilling to grasp this nettle?

Agreed! It's mighty strange the GL is not will not have another bus lane, anything at all to unjam the buses.

Crossrail 2 is not ruled out. I wonder if this kind of analysis shifts a station to Wood Green rather than Turnpike Lane ? 

A previous council CEO pushed hard for an X-Rail 2 station at Wood Green. This was never in TFL's plans for any number of good reasons.

TFL humoured Haringey Council, but it did waste a lot of time, as do so many of this council's half-baked, grandiose ideas. The HDV comes to mind (which also wasted a great deal of money, as well as time).

If X-Rail 2 goes ahead, then it should go via Turnpike Lane, which is what the public consultation clearly showed. Haringey needs good leadership.

And illustrates quite effectively how relatively poorly connected the new North Gate development is…

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