The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Bridge crossed by ‘more traffic than it can handle’

Queensferr­y Crossing operating at 10,000 more vehicles per day than planned

- NEIL HENDERSON

The new Queensferr­y Crossing is already being used by more vehicles than it was built to cope with, transport bosses have revealed.

The alarming news comes fewer than three years after the £1.35 billion bridge was officially opened, with latest traffic data confirming the volume of traffic is beyond what the bridge was designed for, particular­ly during peak times.

Addressing councillor­s at the South and West Fife area committee, Scott Lees, head of transport maintenanc­e for Transport Scotland, said: “There is this view that the new bridge was built and there should be no congestion.

“But it is important to remember that the Queensferr­y Crossing was modelled on the old Forth Road Bridge’s capacity of 70,000 vehicles a day and built as a replacemen­t. It doesn’t increase the provision across the Forth.

“We are well past that now and are currently operating at 24 million vehicles per year at around 80,000 per day.

“It is clear that at peak times, there is more traffic than the bridge can cope with.”

John Russell, operations manager at Forth Estuary Transport Authority, said the problem is being made worse by some drivers using slip roads on and off the main route as rat runs in a bid to dodge queues.

“Rat running actually adds to the problems. Drivers don’t actually gain any time. Even if you skip that line, you’re not beating the traffic, as you still have to rejoin.

“If drivers would just stay on the main line, traffic flow would move much smoother.”

He said future traffic volumes would also be influenced by the developers’ desires to build more homes on either side of the crossing.

“We are already seeing land originally acquired for the bridge that has not been used being handed back and that, coupled with the increase in planning applicatio­ns on both sides of the crossing, will undoubtedl­y play a significan­t part in the volume of traffic.”

With a 10-year operating plan in place, it is estimated vehicle numbers will continue to increase to around 90,000 per day over the coming decade.

Both Mr Lees and Mr Russell said the best way to cope with the traffic was to encourage more people to use public transport, adding a robust public transport strategy would be vital.

Conservati­ve councillor Tony Orton asked about opening the Forth Road Bridge to ease the congestion.

Mr Russell said that would require significan­t changes to the existing local road layout, a move that transport bosses had ruled out.

He said: “I don’t think you’d get as much benefit as you might think, as the capacity at either end is very limited, so you’d just be moving the bottleneck somewhere else.”

He added because an act of parliament was passed to change the Forth Road Bridge to a public transport gateway, the legislatio­n would have to be changed before any alternativ­e scheme could go ahead.

There is more traffic than the bridge can cope with. SCOTT LEES, TRANSPORT SCOTLAND

 ??  ?? The Queensferr­y Crossing was modelled on the old Forth Road Bridge’s capacity of 70,000 vehicles per day.
The Queensferr­y Crossing was modelled on the old Forth Road Bridge’s capacity of 70,000 vehicles per day.

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