Bristol Post

Ring road Metro mayor questions £30m overhaul

- Adam POSTANS Local Democracy Reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

THE West of England’s new metro mayor has criticised £30million plans to widen Bristol ring road – the day after they were announced.

Labour’s Dan Norris says there is a “strong possibilit­y” that making roads bigger only generates more car journeys and does not solve congestion.

His comments pose a serious threat to the proposals which were unveiled only on Monday by Conservati­ve-run South Gloucester­shire Council as it launched a 12-week public consultati­on.

The A4174 upgrades, which would be paid for largely by the Government, involve extra lanes, “throughabo­uts” and more traffic lights – but no bus lanes – at five roundabout­s from Lyde Green to Kingsfield.

Bristol city Green councillor­s have also criticised them, saying the money should be invested in public transport, walking and cycling and that adding car lanes to tackle gridlock is like “loosening your belt to cure obesity”.

Meanwhile, readers largely reacted with dismay, with several saying they would prefer to see flyovers instead of throughabo­uts, also called “hamburger roundabout­s”, where lanes for straight-ahead traffic on the main carriagewa­y are ploughed through the middle of a roundabout.

If the scheme is approved by the Department for Transport, work is expected to begin in 2022 in phases and take three years to complete.

Asked what he thought about the scheme, Mr Norris said: “I will be looking at roadworks under way to see whether changes might be necessary.

“We have to look at the strong possibilit­y that just widening roads simply causes increased journeys by car and does not alleviate congestion.”

Mr Norris is in charge of the West of England Combined Authority (Weca) and has strategic regional responsibi­lity for transport.

Newly elected Bristol city Green Cllr Ed Plowden, who used to work in the authority’s transport department, said: “Although we appreciate that the ring road can be very congested and this causes problems for people, the Green Party is concerned it has been shown time and again that building new roads and increasing the capacity of existing ones is self-defeating.

“‘Adding car lanes to deal with traffic congestion is like loosening your belt to cure obesity’ is as relevant as ever.

“The extra capacity will fill up and the approach simply locks in more car dependency.

“South Gloucester­shire has previously taken out bus lanes on the ring road. The funding should instead be used to tackle the climate crisis by encouragin­g bus use and active travel.

“We urge the new Weca mayor to conduct a rapid review of all new road building proposals.”

First Bus commercial director Rob Pymm said: “We are aware of the plans put forward by South Gloucester­shire Council to upgrade the ring road and will be responding as part of the consultati­on to ensure the needs of buses to serve their customers effectivel­y are taken fully into account.”

Reacting to the upgrades, one Bristol Live reader wrote: “Oh good grief no. It’s taking them literally years to put just one of these throughabo­uts in by Warmley and it still isn’t finished.”

A third posted: “SGC relationsh­ip with the ring road is like that of a child with a scab...they just can’t leave it alone.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Dan Norris, left, has said that road widening does not solve congestion. Above, the proposed Rosary roundabout
Dan Norris, left, has said that road widening does not solve congestion. Above, the proposed Rosary roundabout

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom