With all the attention on the benefits and disbenefits of the current closure of Wightman Road , we haven’t yet spent much time thinking about what the future of Wightman Road might be. With both the current closure and traffic study, now is the ideal time for us to start that process.
I should perhaps begin by saying that I write in full knowledge of the problems caused by the current closure, including the significant impact on some businesses and longer queues at some ‘pinch points’ especially at ‘rush hour’. I’m also very aware that there is more traffic on some roads such as Hornsey High Street, Green Lanes and Turnpike Lane as well as other roads further afield. Alleviating those problems needs to remain uppermost in our minds.
It seems like the most discussed longer-term solution to Wightman Road’s woes locally is permanent closure. Could limiting access, in the current way be the best solution to the danger, pollution and noise caused by the traffic in the block of residential roads made up of Wightman and the ladder roads?
I was one of those who previously thought this was impractical. But now I’m beginning to question this assumption. I’ve been taken aback by seeing and hearing how significant a difference it’s making to people lives; small children cycling to school, cyclists calling out to each about how lovely it is, Wightman Roaders being able to open their windows for the first time, kids skateboarding, hearing birdsong, walking to the station actually being pleasant.
The dangerous pollution levels along Wightman Rd which breach EU limits presumably have been eliminated, taking significant numbers of people including children out of real danger. As others have said this option could also create a pleasant and safe cycling, jogging and walking route, not just for residents of the immediate area, but for a wider group of people across Haringey and beyond.
The other reason for my change of heart is that as time goes on, the level of negative impact gives cause for hope that it may be possible to find good mitigating solutions for the traffic and pollution dispacement. Does anyone have any ideas about what could be done in the surrounding area to help buses flow or/and avoid traffic queues? Can anything be done about the pollution in Turnpike Lane and Green Lanes? What else would we need to think about?
If permanent closure is not the answer, it will be gut-wrenching just to go back to the old status quo and I think the Council will have a fierce fight on its hands if it wants to do that. So what other possible solutions are there that might both allow for an improved quality of life but allow some traffic flow to other Haringey residents? I’ve read elsewhere on HoL about the idea of road-pricing, or limiting access to HGVs. What could we do to drastically reduce cross London traffic rat-running along Wightman and the Ladder roads, yet still permit some access to more local traffic?
Is permanent closure the only option or is there another way?
Tags for Forum Posts: harringay traffic study, traffic, wightman bridge closure, wightman road
Paulie. Do you know which way your argument is facing? Earlier you said (my emphasis)...
""Wightman road is a residential road that is used as a major rat-run causing huge misery for residents and ill health through noise and air pollution." - No - it is an important route which for a hundred years or more has been used by vehicular traffic!"
Isn't that an argument based on what the conditions were like a long time ago?
Also, a car a minute. If that it were so for some folks. Wightman takes 120,000 vehicles a week. That works out to 12 per minute, every minute of every day. It does not take into account the daily cycle of traffic flows, that there can be little or no traffic flow during the night, or that for many Ladder residents traffic on their roads peaks about the time they and their kids are coming home.
Both are a weak basis for an argument!
So in the face of statistics you'd rather rely on personal anecdote? You're being ridiculous now Paulie and just grasping around for anything that supports your untenable position. Happy to continue this conversation with you at the pub but unless you're going to get a bit smarter about your arguments (yes I bet you wish you could go back and edit some of your comments), then I'm out of this too.
And who was it who used a pithy comment to dismiss an argument? There have been a small and memorable number of statistics quoted here that I haven't seen anyone demolish or even dent. Find one single statistic on here that you disagree with and go and disprove it. Start with 120,000 vehicles a week. I wonder where they've all gone? Ha ha ha.
Not every Ladder resident thinks that Wightman Rd should be shut permanently. This is not a forum for open debate unless you agreed that Wightman Rd should be shut.
I disagree, there are many interesting ideas on this thread and others that don't involve full closure. Ideas that include traffic filtering, road parking layout, road design that do not just work for the dominance of moterists and through traffic but residents, cyclists, pedestrians. And ideas that recognise that the current level of traffic and consequent pollution are unsustainable going forward. Change is difficult but it needs to happen!
I really don't mind people asserting their right to drive on Wightman Rd but none of them are acknowledging the many facts available. You're not being bullied off, you're just on the wrong side of the facts.
Fortunately Apple's project Titan will be ready by the end of 2017, they have secured access to a factory in Austria (they could mean The Czech Republic, Americans/Geography and all) capable of building over 700,000 electric vehicles a year. By 2020 those vehicles will be autonomous. Telsa's model S will be shipping by 2018. I presume they'll be autonomous "ready" and just need a software tweak to turn this functionality on.
By 2025 we will no longer lose 3000 Britons a year to road deaths caused by human drivers. We will no longer lose hundreds of thousands of Britons to quiet deaths caused by pollution. We will no longer own motor vehicles (the cost of ownership will be too low for manufacturers to be incentivised to sell us the cars). We may meet our carbon emissions targets. We may jail some Volkswagen executives.
All of this makes me happy, no matter what you think of the closing of Wightman Rd. The internal combustion engine's days are numbered.
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