An action plan to improve air quality has suggested creating a park and ride at Preston Barracks and low emissions zones for lorries and construction traffic.
Brighton and Hove City Council is asking for people’s views on the draft air quality action plan, currently out for formal consultation.
It highlights the stretch of North Street by the Clock Tower as being in need of special attention with the highest levels of nitrogen oxides in Sussex.
About 97% of the city’s buses travel along there, 2,450 buses every day. The report suggests applying for funding to develop technology to automatically switch buses to the lowest emissions mode (either electric or selective catalytic reduction) and look more closely at hill starts.
Written by the council’s air quality specialist Samuel Rouse and dedicated to those who suffer from respiratory illness, the report makes a wide range of suggestions to combat emissions elsewhere in the city, including:
- Planting leafy trees such as London Planes and silver birches
- Park and ride schemes at Preston Barracks, the Amex car park on non-match days and university car parks
- Lobbying for the reopening of the Uckfield to Lewes train line
- Upgrading the Wilson Avenue-Drove Road route to relieve congestion on Lewes Road, Warren Road, Rottingdean High Street and Marine Drive
- A low emissions zone for HGVs along the A259 near Portslade and the A23 and Edward Street, and for construction traffic from the Royal Sussex to Churchill Square
- Re-routing traffic from Rottingdean High Street and imposing a weight restriction there
- A countdown display at the level crossing in Boundary Road, Portslade
- Encouraging a niche market in light low emission taxis licenced for one or two passengers
Mr Rouse writes: “Recent research shows that airborne pollution has direct impacts on human health.
“Modern sanitation was a major breakthrough for environmental health as it massively reduced
the risk of exposure to cholera, typhoid and e-coli.
“A similar societal shift now needs to happen in urban areas to separate combustion emissions being discharged to the actual environment where thousands of people, live, sleep, work, and travel.
“Repeated exposure to very fine microscopic particles that penetrate deep into the respiratory tract and enter the blood stream can cause myriad health problems and serious risk of death.”
The consultation ends on May 5, and so it up will be up to whoever wins the election two days later to decide which parts are pursued and implemented.
Ian Davey, the current Green adminstration’s lead member for transport, said: “We know that air quality is a concern for residents across the city from Rottingdean to Portslade and many areas in between.
“Whilst there have been significant improvement over the last few years with 45 out of 47 monitoring stations recording lower emissions there is still a long way to go.
“The Low Emission Zone that we have just set up in the city centre is already bringing positive results and will help drive emissions down across the city.”
Councillor Gill Mitchell, Labour’s transport spokesperson, said: “Tackling poor air quality is one of the major challenges for the city.
“The current consultation includes several proposals that are not immediately deliverable.
“We agree that city centre pollution is a worry and the Clock Tower area has to be looked at but this must be done in conjunction with other planned transport schemes so that traffic congestion is not increased.”
Nitrogen oxides emissions (anything above 40 μg/m3 requires environmental protection)
Rank | Road Name | Street Area | Four Year Average 2010-2013 NO2 µg/m3 |
1 | B2066 | North Street-Western Road | 80 (114*) |
2 | A23 | Northbound London Road near Oxford Street | 69 |
3 | A2073 and A270 | Lewes Road near Vogue Gyratory and Elm Grove Junction | 68 |
4 | A23 Southbound | Viaduct Terrace | 66 |
5 | A23 Northbound | Marlborough Place to York Place | 61 |
6 | A270 | New England Road-Lower Old Shoreham Road | 58 |
7 | A2010 | Terminus Road-Queens Road | 56 |
8 | B2139 | Trafalgar Road, Portslade | 53 |
9 | B2199 | Frederick Place near Queens Rd | 50 |
10 | A259 | Wellington Road | 49 |
11 | B2123 | Rottingdean High Street | 49 |
12 | A2023 | Sackville Road north end | 49 |
13 | A23 Both Ways | Preston Road near Preston Drove | 49 |
14 | C-Road | The Drove | 49 |
15 | C-Road | Hollingdean Road | 49 |
16 | C-Road | Eastern Road near Hospital | 46 |
17 | B2118 | St James Street near Old Steine | 46 |
18 | A2010 | Buckingham Place Seven Dials | 45 |
*114 μg/m3 as a two year average is monitored on North Street above the pavement above the kerb where there are high pedestrian counts, but no permanent residence.
So North Street and Western Road has the highest pollution levels – and what is this area dedicated to? Diesel Buses and Diesel taxis – no private motor vehicles – but aren’t motorists the spawn of the devil?
And shock-horror – the council looking are at a park-and-ride where I’d suggested – but the green party is totally against them according to their party policy and their environment expert @HJarrs.
And the pollution levels at the Vogue Gyratory are some of the highest in the city – surely not – and this is the average for the 3 years rather than just since the intentional extra congestion was caused by Davey’s master scheme. I wonder what they are now?
And the Lewes Road improvements have led to more traffic finding alternate routes – never – we were told this hadn’t happened – so other routes now need upgrading…
And planting more trees – including plane trees and silver birches – the green party experts mocked me for my lack of professional scientific knowledge and said we need big old elms instead!
So how many other bits of misinformation have we been fed over the past 4 years justifying the various grandiose vanity schemes we’ve had imposed on us?
So now that Davey is finally off to pastures new, and hopefully we can have a different party more worried about improving matter rather than implementing idealistic schemes badly.
Also very pleased to see Portslade being mentioned again – has someone told the green to keep mentioning the area after ignoring it for 4 years as they believed it wasn’t part of the city – thanks to local expert @gribbet.
At least we only have 4 weeks and 1 day to go…
More congestion means more pollution, the greens have done well in creating both, the city can not wait till May to kick them out for good, ideological baffons,,
Park and ride at Preston Barracks is pretty pointless while you still have to negotiate the single lane congestion caused by the bus lanes, and it is not very accessible from the A23.
Upgrading The Drove to bypass Woodingdean would be a very good idea, which is presumably why the greens would never consider it.