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Jimbo, just got off the phone to a contractor who's popping down our way next week from Oakwood. Warned him about the traffic but his reaction was that the traffic on GL had got better than BEFORE the Wightman Rd closure because he thinks drivers are avoiding the area. So his thinking is that the closure has benefited GL as well.
I went down to GL myself yesterday, once at 1.30/2.30pm & the other at 7.30pm and traffic seemed remarkably normal.
This might be of interest. Some relatively recent NOx pollution information.
This is from before the road closure, and the data for Green Lanes (and Wightman and Turnpike Lane) indicate they are all consistently above EU limits!
Do not forget Jimbo, the Traffic Study that is yet to really get going was initiated primarily because of concerns about traffic levels across the Ladder, but part of its remit is to look at health and general wellbeing- and pollution for me forms part of this. Its certainly a topic I would like to see assessed across the area.
Without in anyway trying to diminish your absolutely valid concerns, the difficulty I have (and this may be just me) is that I find it hard to characterise things like (in my case) the congestion on GL from one week to the next. For me, it is always congested, so I do not see if it is much different today vs pre bridge closure. The question I guess for you is do you not always have to have your windows closed, I cannot imagine that you have it open that often. Is the impact discernable pre and post bridge closure, or is the warmer (spring) weather a factor etc?
You said you're on the 3rd floor, particulate and NOx pollution does reduce with height so your windows shouldn't be quite as bad as down on the Green Lanes footpath. We will have a few spare diffusion tubes so if you'd like to find out what it really is like up there ping me a message and we can put one up outside you 3rd floor window as part of the study.
Ant. Remind me what time of year you did the surveying? I know you talked about it in June and reported in October. I assume July/Aug?
I did a lot of work on exactly this issue as an undergrad, and the time of year (temp/rainfall/sunlight/potential for localised inversions etc) can have a big impact on the results, so removing as many variables as possible will be important in making the comparison as 'valid' as you can.
I agree...
Last year it was done 1st July - 29th. There is an annual local authority monitoring cycle (set be Defra?) which that was set by, this year the date for the monitoring cycle is 29th June - 27th July. But the UCL people will tell us the exact dates to use to provide the best results for comparison.
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