Otago Daily Times

Only one way on oneways

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THE Dunedin City Council’s plan to turn George St into a slow oneway street raised serious concerns about retail and central city viability, but there is a bigger threat looming.

Somehow, the foolish proposal emerged last year that Dunedin’s oneway system itself should be abandoned. Somehow, this would also bind the new hospital, some of the university and the central city into a safer, more pedestrian­friendly and thriving area.

This plan needs to be rejected forthwith. It would foul up traffic and movement across as well as into and out of the city.

Rather than enhance the CBD, it would discourage people from venturing in unless they really needed to.

Dunedin’s hills, harbour and railway line create a narrow northsouth corridor. This is the way through and the main way into the city.

About 50 years ago, traffic planners came up with the scheme for the duallane oneways to expedite traffic flows.

While it is far from ideal for heavy trucks on State Highway 1 to rumble through the university and past the hospital, other options are worse.

Subsequent­ly, attempts to bolster an eastern bypass on the harboursid­e of the railway line have been sporadic and have only made a small difference.

The new proposal would see this promoted again and developed further. This should happen regardless. But that route is much less direct. And across the Anzac Ave bridge and through Frederick St to Castle St could be a diabolical choke zone.

As traffic volumes rose in recent years, the oneway system itself is struggling to cope, and not just at peak times.

When one lane of a oneway is blocked, traffic backs up quickly. What a nightmare that would be when the new twoway through route was partially out of action for some reason.

Movement through the oneways is, for a city Dunedin’s size, massive (30,000 cars a day), and largely not because it is a section of the nation’s state highway. Northern residents travel to the likes of the Peninsula, South Dunedin shops, the airport, St Clair, Mosgiel and need to move efficientl­y along the corridor between the CBD and the harbour at all times of the day. Southern residents travel in large numbers to the university, polytechni­c, stadium, Port Chalmers and wherever.

Pedestrian safety is often cited as a reason for change. Indeed, if traffic grinds to a halt on the proposed 50kmh twoway Castle St, walkers cannot be injured by briskmovin­g cars.

But crossing oneways has distinct advantages. Vehicles are only coming from one direction, and traffic lights create breaks. Intersecti­ons are less complex.

The planners’ alternativ­e proposed last year was to retain the one ways, with changes. Partial lower speed zones under 50kmh are suggested. They could work as long as they are not too extensive and do not slow offpeak traffic too much.

The zone would be for the oneways through the new hospital. Undoubtedl­y, hospital constructi­on will cause major transport headaches. But these would be temporary.

As it is, the “green wave” of traffic signals (which works well outside the heavy traffic of peak times) has been interrupte­d by the Barnes Dance for pedestrian­s at the Albany St intersecti­ons. And the narrowing of the lanes to make way for cycle lanes constrict the space for traffic and make motorists more likely to drive a little slower.

If Dunediniti­es, and visitors from around the wider area, are going to come into the city for shopping, concerts and socialisin­g, they will also be put off if they cannot exit effectivel­y.

The oneway system, while far from perfect, has stood the test of time. The twoway alternativ­e and a beefedup “bypass” will fail Dunedin — including its central city — badly.

If traffic cannot flow between the hills and the harbour, Dunedin will be cutting off its north from its south.

Dunedin will also become an infamous State Highway 1 blockage.

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