In case it's escaped your notice or slipped your mind, Wightman Road will be closed to through traffic for five months starting next Tuesday 29th March.
This will be a significant dislocation to North London traffic movement. So much so that warning notices have been placed as far away as Archway. No doubt it will also have a significant impact on Harringay's traffic.
However, there really is no alternative to at least partial road closure. The railway bridge between Alroy and Wightman roads is being replaced and there will simply be no road for a few months!
One option the Council could have taken would have been to simply reroute the traffic via the Ladder rung roads. It is to their credit, however, they recognised that with over 16,000 vehicles a day using Wightman Road, this would have placed an intolerable burden on our narrow residential roads, already beset by undue traffic volumes.
After consultation with residents, the solution decided upon is to place blocks at regular intervals along Wightman Road, in effect creating clusters of two or three rung roads. Whilst this will retain unfettered access for residents. it will render the whole Ladder, including Wightman, useless as a rat run. You can clearly see the details on the full size pdf map attached below.
Quite what it will mean for traffic in Harringay, Haringey and further afield remains to be seen. Those of us who have been working with the Council on this very much hope that traffic will quickly find other routes. It's fair to say, however, that at very best, we're going to experience some very heavy congestion on Green Lanes for a month or so.
At the same time, the Harringay traffic study will continue. The coincident timing of this piece of work with the bridge closure may be fortunate in that it will give the consultants an opportunity to study the outcome of diverting traffic away from Harringay.
A pdf copy of the Wightman Road closure is attached, along with some Council-produced documentation. You can stay up to date with what's happening on the Wightman Road closure on a dedicated page on the council website here.
Tags for Forum Posts: traffic, wightman bridge, wightman bridge closure
I'm not sure if that was a typo MLB, but for the avoidance of doubt, it's 75% of journeys starting and ending beyond the borough.
And - they're handing out maps of the road closures. I think they're doing an excellent job.
What is worrying is the number of drivers with very poor eyesight
Definitely improving - the tailback on Turnpike Lane was only up to the railway bridge at 10.30 this morning. If they solve that right turn cycle it'll make thing more like "normal". And Hornsey Park Road seems much quieter than usual today - which probably means many of the 75% are diverting well before they get into the area. Wonder if this is the calm before the schools return on Monday...
Very interesting statistics Hugh, many thanks. I had a similar experince driving back through Hornsey to the Ladder at 12.20pm today - started queuing at the Hornsey bridge and despite a wait through Turnpike Lane and then a drive up Green Lanes and onto the St Anne's Road/Salisbury Road one way system, I was home to Warham Road by 12.50pm. Longer of course but not as bad as I feared. Similarly I left home at 8am to drive to Alexandra Palace via Hornsey for a meeting and it only took 20 minutes - of course I'd given myself an hour!! I agree that it is the lights at Turnpike Lane/Green Lanes which are slowing things up.
I agree the traffic was dramatically better this morning, but the school kids are off....what will it be like next week?
As I'm late to the chain i hope I've not missed this as a discussion point already.
Thanks Hugh, also seems that traffic is significantly easing to me. My own largely anecdotal observations so far:
Hugh
In a post on another thread you quoted some figures which helped justify why Wightman Road needed to be closed to prevent significant amount of traffic diverting to ladder roads. In these figures is there an element of double counting in the analysis? Essentially all vehicles that use a ladder road would have to join Wightman Road, either on entry or exit (as ladder roads are one way). Therefore is it possible to draw the conclusion that by simply shutting the top of Wightman road it would add 120,000 cars to the ladder? I would expect the only way of calculating this would have been to monitor how many cars use Wightman as a through road i.e. from Finsbury Park to Turnpike Lane. Was this done? Alternatively you can total the traffic on the ladder roads and deduct it from the volume that uses Wightman road to get an estimate figure for the additional traffic that would be added to the ladder.
Apologies for the challenge but the assumption that traffic will find alternative routes in our area which has a significant limiting factor of the train line is worrying.
Richard
Richard, your query is better directed at Michael Anderson as he has seen some of this data. Hopefully Michael will pick this up. I am not sure Hugh suggested that shutting the top of Wightman would add 120k cars to the Ladder- they are already there on the whole as they do not all make full N-S journeys. Many are making E-W/W-E journeys, primarily via Ladder rung roads as you point out, but all of them at some point have to come onto Wightman.
We are trying to get permission from the council to share this information so everyone can see it. They have been a bit touchy about information flow in the past, and we are not getting a response from the council to requests for us to release the underlying data. I guess they are a bit busy. We will keep trying though and we will share it as soon as we can if the council have not already done so.
I've stuck the first bit of analysis here
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