For those of you who are active on HoL, you'll be very much aware of Haringey Council's transport study. This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for all Harringay's residents to have their say on how best to reduce our excessive traffic burden. To that end, we want to ensure that all residents are FULLY informed on the options available.
Unlike Haringey Council, we do not have a juggernaut PR system pushing our message, or the money to pay for it. So we are asking for your help. We want to raise money to fund a print run of leaflets for Wightman and all the Ladder roads, plus other events to raise awareness.
If you'd like to help us raise funds for the second phase of our campaign; to create a safer, healthier, happier Harringay for everyone, then please click the link below which will take you to our Just Giving page.
Thank you.
Yes, I would like to help raise £700 to fund leaflets If you'd like more information, or get involved, please check out our Living Wightman Blog or Facebook Page.
Tags for Forum Posts: harringay traffic study, traffic
Gina, you just told us that one way is a bad idea and cited your own experience. If Wightman isn't filtered making it one way is likely. The arguments made by yourself and this site's owner against one way are persuasive--in particular that drivers go faster when there is no traffic coming at them.
I wonder though if this will be the case here for my understanding is that the one way system would also mean a cycle lane and bicycles would be going both directions.
Hi Knavel - my guess is the council are hoping some people will be tempted to support the one-way Wightman solution because of the new 2-way cycle lane it offers. The example given in the consultant's shortlist document is Cable Street - one-way traffic, two-way cycle lane (Cable Street is part of Cycle Superhighway 3), full-width pavements (so no pavement parking), parking restricted to one side. Here's a screenshot from a youtube video of Cable Street:
Full-width pavements and a cycle path certainly meet some key objectives of the transport study. But, apart from the fact that building safe, properly segregated cycle paths is pretty expensive (so, will the council actually do it properly or just put some paint on the road?), it's a fail on other key objectives because sooner or later the one-way system will just induce even more traffic onto Wightman, particularly given the scale of local building developments (e.g. new flats at Hornsey Station, new flats and a Sainsburys superstore on Hornsey High Street, hundreds of new flats off Mary Neuner Road and a completely new shopping city in Wood Green).
If it were set up like that, where would all the cars currently parked on Wightman Road move to?
Rhetorical question.
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