South Wales Echo

Air pollution fears over car park bids

- MATT DISCOMBE Local democracy reporter matt.discombe@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PLANS for two huge car parks in Cardiff Bay have sparked fears of traffic chaos and pollution in the area.

The owners of Mermaid Quay want to double the size of its multi-storey car park in Stuart Street by adding two more levels which would increase the number of spaces from 372 to 682.

Meanwhile another multi-storey car park for 2,000 vehicles is a part of plans to build a new indoor arena on the site of the Red Dragon Centre.

A lung disease charity has criticised plans for the two car parks, saying they “do nothing to prove the council is committed to alternativ­e travel”.

But Cardiff council has said the multi-storey planned at the Red Dragon Centre would make up for the amount of spaces lost to the proposed 15,000-capacity indoor arena.

A spokesman for the British Lung Foundation in Wales said: “These plans unequivoca­lly contradict the council’s commitment to modal shift and improving air quality. Allowing the plans to go ahead would be a major step back in our journey to cleaner air, with more cars on the road, increased congestion and consequent­ly higher concentrat­ions of air pollution.

“The focus needs to be on improving public transport infrastruc­ture to encourage sustainabl­e travel in and out of the Bay area.

“We urge the council to reconsider these projects this time putting public health at the forefront of their decision-making.”

Councillor Saeed Ebrahim has started a petition against the proposed expansion of Mermaid Quay car park – citing concerns over traffic, noise, air pollution and that the developmen­t would overshadow nearby homes.

He said: “It’s going to be chaos. There has to be limits to what residents can cope with. I can understand Cardiff Bay is a tourist destinatio­n but we have trains, buses and bikes to get there.”

He added: “The indoor arena car park is in a non-residentia­l area, but the Mermaid Quay car park would overlook a whole estate. It’s right next to a primary school.”

The £500m plans for the area also include 50,000sq ft of restaurant­s and bars, 200,000sq ft of retail space, 45,000sq ft of leisure space, apartments and a cinema screen complex. Cardiff council could also relocate its County Hall headquarte­rs to free up space for the developmen­t.

A spokesman for the council said: “The planning applicatio­n for the extension to the car park in Mermaid Quay is a live applicatio­n and is yet to be determined, so it would be inappropri­ate to comment at this stage.

“All planning applicatio­ns are judged on their merit, based on planning policy and law and all objections to any planning applicatio­n are considered in line with this process.

“In relation to the proposal of building a new multi-storey car park for the Indoor Arena developmen­t, this proposal is largely to consolidat­e the existing surface car parking into one smaller location to free up land for developmen­t.”

A spokeswoma­n for Mermaid Quay said: “More parking is needed in the Bay to meet growing demand, both as a result of improvemen­ts at Mermaid Quay and the council’s ambitious plans for further leisure uses including the new Arena.

“We believe one of the sustainabl­e ways to deliver the additional parking that the Bay needs is to use an existing car park site more intensivel­y rather than developing other sites.”

 ??  ?? Plans for the Mermaid Quay car park
Plans for the Mermaid Quay car park

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom