Jump to content

Recommended Posts

ajdoc Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> By the way these are 11 year olds, surely they

> can find their own way to school? This obviously

> doesn't apply to everyone, but I would have

> thought most family's could give the no car day a

> trial.


Yes - I have never understood why a child of that age needs to be driven to school. I used to get the bus for 7 miles from my home and then walk another mile. And I reckon a lot of the kids aren't going anything like that far.

It's interesting to read this post about what is happening at one end of Friern Road. I live at the other end, close to two primary schools and would love to see it blocked off in a similar way. We are a rat run for traffic avoiding Barry Road and/or taking a short cut to Lordship Lane and the South Circular. Higher speed bumps were added recently but this work stopped at the junction with Goodrich Road, meaning that at the top end of Friern Road the traffic can really put their foot down. The road was blocked off a few years ago (ironically due to gas works I believe)and the change was startling. I'm wondering why one end of the road is more of a priority than the other, or if we at the top end of the road are paying the price for the traffic calming measures further down the road?
this closure is ridiculous. it is not a rat run, any other than any other non-main road. I use it daily to get home from lordship lane and have done for many many years. it is never busy and there is never a queue to get out onto peckham rye. I never see anything approaching a lorry using it... apart from the dustcart every week. they have already closed two roads at the top of this road. the whole anti-car thing is bonkers. I sometimes feel cllr barber will not be happy until he has wiped cars of the face of the world. since when has it been an accident blackspot? it is all just another excuse to interfere in our perfectly reasonable and perfectly safe movements around our local streets.
Monitoring has shown that it has substantially more traffic than other 'non-main' roads. There is often a queue onto Peckham Rye in the Morning . Especially during School Drop off again in the Morning . Lorrys often come through through out the day.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A lot of this is down to why the high street came into being in the first place  consumer demand  And now times has changed and consumers behave differently.  And businesses adapt to that.  It’s a bottom up approach as opposed to something imposed upon us.   It’s not to my tastes. But what do people expect to happen.  Jazzer is on to something when he says boycott Amazon - but the reality is even many who boycott Amazon choose other or more ethical alternatives. But still online  going into town for “a shop” just isn’t what people do anymore  Yeah but that’s not a real comparison. And “for ill” glosses over a lot of wrong as well  but we live in 2025 now and any of us oldies who think when we were 20 was the best time ever, a time we should go back to are just pining for our youths  there is no country in the world that can turn back the clock.  So in 2025, where is the closest vision of somewhere you would like.  Because if you look globally you don’t just get capitalism.  You can choose dictatorships or communism too 
    • Kramer is great, met her a couple of times.  Told her the story of when she ran for Mayor and didn't attend a community event as she didn't want to spoil Ken (Livingstone)'s love in.  Amused me and her no doubt 
    • I remember when all this was fields. The United Kingdom between 1945 and 1979. For good and ill.
    • Large supermarkets, the big shop, not relying on mum getting the bus into town, longer opening hours, end of price controls and other restrictions.  All affected the high street well before the internet.   Rye Lane is still pretty buzzy.  Loads of independent shops.  Modern life is not always rubbish 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...