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M50 - apalling gridlock

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,229 ✭✭✭LeinsterDub


    Ah here. Come on now. You have to be telling lies. Sure a few posts back we were told that public transport is the only way to reduce grid lock on the M50.

    No one said the only way.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 793 ✭✭✭metricspaces


    No one said the only way.

    They did.
    Pubic transport is the only solution.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,246 ✭✭✭✭Hurrache


    Why?

    Access primarily, and the cost of prime city centre land.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,972 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Hurrache wrote: »
    Access primarily, and the cost of prime city centre land.

    In this case, there is already a hospital on the land.

    I do agree though that it should have been in one of the alternative proposed locations. Primarily because of access.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,229 ✭✭✭LeinsterDub


    They did.

    Fair enough I stand corrected. Claiming public transport is the only way to improve the situation is silly


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,705 ✭✭✭Nermal


    We need to stop thinking of Ireland as a resource solely to fill Dublin's needs.

    Is this a joke?

    Just under €70M per year of the €200M LPT raised in Dublin gets reallocated elsewhere. That could be paying the bond on Dart Underground instead of filling in potholes in hamlets in the middle of nowhere.

    To say nothing of the plan to waste literally billions on hooking the peasantry up to fibre broadband.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,972 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Nermal wrote: »
    Is this a joke?

    Just under €70M per year of the €200M LPT raised in Dublin gets reallocated elsewhere. That could be paying the bond on Dart Underground instead of filling in potholes in hamlets in the middle of nowhere.

    To say nothing of the plan to waste literally billions on hooking the peasantry up to fibre broadband.

    Forgive me if I think you are biased beyond logic on this and therefore have no interest in 'debating'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,169 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Nermal wrote: »
    in hamlets in the middle of nowhere.

    Correction: We dont have hamlets. We have crossroads. If it were hamlets the cost of this would be 1/3 or less.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,704 ✭✭✭✭RayCun


    There are three possible levels of action

    Individual level - look for alternatives to single-occupancy car use. Public transport, cycling, car pooling

    Companies - increase support for flexitime, working from home, moving offices out of Dublin

    Government level - prioritise more efficient use of road space - public transport and cycling over private cars (and car parking)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,033 ✭✭✭Brian CivilEng


    The available public transport would not be able to facilitate the volumes driving on the M50 no matter how much force is used.

    More people already use public transport to commute in Dublin than use the M50. Don't be fooled by the fact that the M50 looks full, 6000 cars per direction per hour would fill the M50. That amount of cars is probably only about 8000 people, considering the amount of single occupancy cars. The DART can carry 1400 people per service, so one every 10 minutes means 8400 per hour.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭tom1ie


    What, with like guns and stuff?

    Well...tax incentives, hikes on diesel, petrol and car tax, hikes on tolls, these would be the stick,
    Proper camera based enforcement of bus lanes, more busses, tax incentives for bus passes, these would be the incentives.
    Oh and guns. Lots of guns.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭con___manx1


    The only way the govenment will sort out the traffic problem is if they decentralise jobs. The public transport in dublin is a joke compared to other city's. They should offer incentives to companys to set up away from the city. If they dont its gonna get much worse very soon. In the last two years iv been working up that way and its gottn much worse since i started. I wonder what it will be like in two more years : )


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭tom1ie


    The only way the govenment will sort out the traffic problem is if they decentralise jobs. The public transport in dublin is a joke compared to other city's. They should offer incentives to companys to set up away from the city. If they dont its gonna get much worse very soon. In the last two years iv been working up that way and its gottn much worse since i started. I wonder what it will be like in two more years : )

    So where would you incentivize business to set up in Ireland outside of Dublin that isn’t already chocked up with traffic gridlock, but also has excellent airport links (for international business), decent water supply, decent broadband, access to a large population, access to hospitals, schools etc.
    Every other city in Ireland is chocking on traffic also.
    The problem is people feeling they are entitled to drive their car where they want, when clearly a functioning city should be public Transport based.
    The nta and government need to fast track all pt projects, and reduce car usage to an absolute minimum.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,936 ✭✭✭Tazzimus


    gflood wrote: »
    Appalling Grid all this week on M50. Northbound today was back up to Sandyford. When I hear about upcoming "carbon tax" changes I wonder how much wasted fuel happens every morning with the Dublin commute due to crap infrastructure. Not to mention peoples time.


    Until we improve situations like this carbon taxes should be postponed.
    Todays was a crash at J6 that blocked all three lanes.

    Before we go about upgrading the road, we could look at educating people a bit better on how to drive on it.
    Nearly every day there's a crash morning and evening to contend with, and once that happens, mayhem for the road and surrounding areas as people try to get around it.

    Edit: Wasn't shifting through 12 pages so this may have been mentioned already, no harm reiterating it though.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭tom1ie


    Tazzimus wrote: »
    Todays was a crash at J6 that blocked all three lanes.

    Before we go about upgrading the road, we could look at educating people a bit better on how to drive on it.
    Nearly every day there's a crash morning and evening to contend with, and once that happens, mayhem for the road and surrounding areas as people try to get around it.

    This is the flaw with a car based system.
    Remove the car from the commuting system and you don’t have a problem. ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,525 ✭✭✭con___manx1


    tom1ie wrote: »
    So where would you incentivize business to set up in Ireland outside of Dublin that isn’t already chocked up with traffic gridlock, but also has excellent airport links (for international business), decent water supply, decent broadband, access to a large population, access to hospitals, schools etc.
    Every other city in Ireland is chocking on traffic also.
    The problem is people feeling they are entitled to drive their car where they want, when clearly a functioning city should be public Transport based.
    The nta and government need to fast track all pt projects, and reduce car usage to an absolute minimum.

    The companys dont have to go to the city ill give leixlip in kildare as an example. Intel ireland are based there with thousands of people working in the place. Its not to far from dublin but there are alot of towns that within an hour or two of the city. Not that far from the airport Really.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,936 ✭✭✭Tazzimus


    tom1ie wrote: »
    This is the flaw with a car based system.
    Remove the car from the commuting system and you don’t have a problem. ;)
    A good commuting system is needed first before we can do that :)


  • Posts: 18,962 [Deleted User]


    you just know that the silly government response will be to put in those tolls all along the road that were talked about before.

    Ireland is just a joke in terms of infrastructure planning and execution in general.

    Being a coastal city doesn't help but many other countries have managed it.

    With another global economy correction due in the next few years (that's the cycle) the coffers will not exactly be full either.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,870 ✭✭✭✭mfceiling


    tom1ie wrote: »
    This is the flaw with a car based system.
    Remove the car from the commuting system and you don’t have a problem. ;)

    Wrong...the m50 is mental busy but a lot of the problems are...

    People on phones
    People rubber necking
    People not paying attention
    People (pricks) cutting across lanes at the last second to get off the m50 at their exit
    People not understanding how to merge properly
    People "sitting" (dawdling) in the middle and outside lane
    People tailgating
    People braking for no apparent reason


    See the problem ^^

    People.

    If the speed limit on the M50 was reduced to say 70 or 80 kph and was heavily policed (cameras and garda) and people were regularly stopped and prosecuted for the reasons above then the road would flow better.
    I'm not saying it would solve the problem (a massive investment in public transport is needed) but it would definitely enable the volumes on the M50 to be managed better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,169 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    The only way the govenment will sort out the traffic problem is if they decentralise jobs. The public transport in dublin is a joke compared to other city's. They should offer incentives to companys to set up away from the city. If they dont its gonna get much worse very soon. In the last two years iv been working up that way and its gottn much worse since i started. I wonder what it will be like in two more years : )

    Why? Dublin doesn't have much more jobs than other cities, say Copenhagen.

    Having a central business district is normal. Just not everyone can drive to it.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,760 ✭✭✭Effects


    ED E wrote: »
    Why? Dublin doesn't have much more jobs than other cities, say Copenhagen.

    There's no rain in either of those videos. That's what puts me off cycling in bad weather. But then I'd rather take the bus than drive in rush hour.

    But wasn't there a report a few years ago that Copenhagen gets more rain each year than Dublin?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭tom1ie


    mfceiling wrote: »
    Wrong...the m50 is mental busy but a lot of the problems are...

    People on phones
    People rubber necking
    People not paying attention
    People (pricks) cutting across lanes at the last second to get off the m50 at their exit
    People not understanding how to merge properly
    People "sitting" (dawdling) in the middle and outside lane
    People tailgating
    People braking for no apparent reason


    See the problem ^^

    People.

    If the speed limit on the M50 was reduced to say 70 or 80 kph and was heavily policed (cameras and garda) and people were regularly stopped and prosecuted for the reasons above then the road would flow better.
    I'm not saying it would solve the problem (a massive investment in public transport is needed) but it would definitely enable the volumes on the M50 to be managed better.


    WRONG :)
    You answered your own question. If all the people you describe above got public transport and allowed the employed drivers to ferry them from a to b all those problems you describe would disappear.
    I know it’s hard for you to understand but people are crap drivers, so take them out of their cars and put them in public transport where they can’t harm each other.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,169 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Effects wrote: »
    There's no rain in either of those videos. That's what puts me off cycling in bad weather. But then I'd rather take the bus than drive in rush hour.

    But wasn't there a report a few years ago that Copenhagen gets more rain each year than Dublin?

    There's fvckin lashings of of snow!

    And Dublin gets feck all rain. Ireland gets feck all rain in fact, we just get little bits dispersed over many days so its annoying.

    Just one website:
    https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Geography/Average-rainfall-in-depth/Mm-per-year

    Depending on the year we rate about 80th. And a lot more falls on the west coast so Dublin would rank much lower on its own.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,854 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    how can they solve the ridiculous low density sprawl of the housing estates and business parks? they cant! I dont see how getting rid of the car is practical for a large amount of people! Due to the idiotic planning decisions that have been made... The damage is done! That golf course beside the red cow luas should be CPO'd and used for high density apartments and the same with many of the old business parks etc on 'high quality' transport corridors!

    the eastern bypass should be completed, the port moved to bremore as per the plans years ago... Dublin port are now looking at constructing a new crossing from the north to south port... I wonder if tracks for the luas to serve the IGBS could be a part of that... Traffic over the east link is farcical....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,786 ✭✭✭✭tom1ie


    Idbatterim wrote: »
    how can they solve the ridiculous low density sprawl of the housing estates and business parks? they cant! I dont see how getting rid of the car is practical for a large amount of people! Due to the idiotic planning decisions that have been made... The damage is done! That golf course beside the red cow luas should be CPO'd and used for high density apartments and the same with many of the old business parks etc on 'high quality' transport corridors!

    Agree with a lot of this, but we have to reduce car commuting one way or the other.
    Park and rides should be built on all the major spine routes into the cc, then run qbc’s on these spine routes with high frequency busses. Intersect these with orbital bus routes until all of bus connects comes online.
    Promote car pooling in work.
    Get people to cycle, but put money into cycling infrastructure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,854 ✭✭✭✭Idbatterim


    Id wonder about the practicality of all retail only opening from 10am or onwards, like they enforce with Ikea?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 688 ✭✭✭Terrlock


    What about the idea of actually banning all cars off the road altogether.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,704 ✭✭✭✭RayCun


    The companys dont have to go to the city ill give leixlip in kildare as an example. Intel ireland are based there with thousands of people working in the place. Its not to far from dublin but there are alot of towns that within an hour or two of the city. Not that far from the airport Really.

    Take Leixlip as an example then. If the company I work for moved there, half of our employees would start looking for another job.

    All the people who like living and working in the city centre would be pissed off. All the people who use the bus or DART to get to work would be pissed off. All the people who get a train that doesn't go through Leixlip would be pissed off. All the people who can cycle to the city centre would be pissed off.

    A handful of people would be better off, and another handful no different, but for most people it would be much worse.

    It makes sense for Intel because they are in manufacturing and need space, but not for office work.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 793 ✭✭✭metricspaces


    Fair enough I stand corrected. Claiming public transport is the only way to improve the situation is silly

    I agree. We need to think outside the yellow box!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,972 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    RayCun wrote: »
    Take Leixlip as an example then. If the company I work for moved there, half of our employees would start looking for another job.

    All the people who like living and working in the city centre would be pissed off. All the people who use the bus or DART to get to work would be pissed off. All the people who get a train that doesn't go through Leixlip would be pissed off. All the people who can cycle to the city centre would be pissed off.

    A handful of people would be better off, and another handful no different, but for most people it would be much worse.

    It makes sense for Intel because they are in manufacturing and need space, but not for office work.

    Maybe so as you are already based in the city centre. But if you were looking for a job would you rule out such a company if it was based in Leixlip or would you just accept that as a reality.

    Change is not easy, look it the decentralisation fiasco. But where new businesses are considering location, they should be directed to alternative locations where possible.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 40,351 Mod ✭✭✭✭Seth Brundle


    No one said the only way.
    They did.
    My statement (bold as it was) was a response to your proposal to reduce traffic volumes by remote working and other ideas which have been looked before at but have failed to either take off or have any noticeable impact.
    The core problem is that people refuse to get out of their cars and this has been supported by government policy for decades.
    To transport people from A to B quickly and sustainably we need to reduce car numbers by replacing it with public transport. Public transport can be improved in the short term by purchasing more vehicles and hiring new drivers.
    People have been remote working for years now and it hasnt solved the traffic problem. My kids schools have adjusted their hours but again it could easily be said that the impact on traffic is negligible (If anything more parents are dropping their kids off nowadays). These ideas are welcomed but they won't make a dent in the overall daily car trip numbers. How many jobs can be done remotely?

    So to get back to the subject at hand: how do we solve the problem of traffic congestion? PT is the solution!


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 23,008 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    Maybe so as you are already based in the city centre. But if you were looking for a job would you rule out such a company if it was based in Leixlip or would you just accept that as a reality.

    Yes, many of the best and brightest would rule out not being city center based.

    That is why all the top IT and financial firms base themselves in the most attractive city center locations. It allows them to attract the best talent.

    This certainly isn't unique to Ireland or Dublin. It is happening world wide. Similar business tend to cluster around one another in the same location. This makes it much easier for them to head hunt skilled staff from one another and also tends to be better for the employees too (easier to network and move companies without uprooting kids, etc.).
    Change is not easy, look it the decentralisation fiasco. But where new businesses are considering location, they should be directed to alternative locations where possible.

    You can't direct these sort of large companies to set up where they don't want to! You can try and give tax breaks to set up somewhere else, but you can't force them. Because if you try, they will just shrug their shoulders and open in downtime Amsterdam or Frankfurt instead, since we are competing on an international stage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 31,141 ✭✭✭✭Lumen


    So to get back to the subject at hand: how do we solve the problem of traffic congestion? PT is the solution!
    No.

    What causes traffic congestion is people tolerating traffic congestion. Traffic will always tend to increase to the point where people are right on the brink of taking buses (where there are bus lanes), moving house, moving job, cycling, giving up work altogether, buying a motorbike, emigrating....

    Demand is elastic! Think about what that means. If you improve traffic flows that just sucks a bunch more people on to the roads who previously considered it just slightly too inconvenient, until the gridlock returns and equilibrium is restored.

    The only time we have respite is during temporary changes in volumes, like over the summer when the schools are off. If you banned all parents from using cars that would give only temporary reprieve, and then you'd have 51 weeks of gridlock rather than 39, because a load of people would start commuting from Arklow and Cavan.

    The solution to traffic congestion is making car use unpleasant in ways other than it being slow. Like massive taxes/congestion charges. Which end up giving over the roads to rich people.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,972 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    bk wrote: »
    Yes, many of the best and brightest would rule out not being city center based.

    That is why all the top IT and financial firms base themselves in the most attractive city center locations. It allows them to attract the best talent.

    This certainly isn't unique to Ireland or Dublin. It is happening world wide. Similar business tend to cluster around one another in the same location. This makes it much easier for them to head hunt skilled staff from one another and also tends to be better for the employees too (easier to network and move companies without uprooting kids, etc.).

    You can't direct these sort of large companies to set up where they don't want to! You can try and give tax breaks to set up somewhere else, but you can't force them. Because if you try, they will just shrug their shoulders and open in downtime Amsterdam or Frankfurt instead, since we are competing on an international stage.

    As others have pointed out, Apple seem to be ok in Cork, Dell spent long enough in Limerick.

    I seriously doubt that many people would rule out a role because of not being in the city centre. As I've posted before, I've gone to shows in Dublin and been back in Ennis by just after 01:00 am. Ireland is a small country. Dublin is a small city. This idea that not being in the middle of it equates to missing out is unreasonable.

    I do appreciate it is a nice city, environment (at times) but not so much that national policy should facilitate trying to squeeze more and more in there.

    Yes, some business types will want to be located there, but many won't be pushed if they have access to their needs elsewhere.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 6,522 Mod ✭✭✭✭Irish Steve


    Having read through this thread, when will all involved realise that until there is a massive increase in public transport services that does not include buses (Yes, I mean rail, regardless of if it's heavy rail or Luas type rail) that serves areas like Sandyford, Citywest, Parkwest, Red Cow, Blanchardstown Industrial areas (to name just a few) instead of just the Eastern side of the city centre, the public transport system will not be capable or suitable to provide any meaningful service to a significant percentage of the people that commute on a daily basis.

    Buses on their own cannot provide mass transit, which is what is needed at peak periods to move the numbers involved, and that means using heavy rail (and maybe Luas) in conjunction with integrated local feeder bus services from both outlying stations and other stations within the M50 ring, and those buses need to provide regular local services on a high frequency, not go wandering across the city on long distance routes. Given how the city has developed, much of the required rail would now have to be underground, as the land to provide surface routes is not available,

    The other major issue is that the M50 is the only viable crossing point over the Liffey between Inchicore and Leixlip, and neither of those places are capable or suitable for high traffic volumes, so that adds a significant pressure to an already poor design road.

    The M50 route had already been outlined by the mid 80s, long before the massive increase in urban sprawl to the west of Dublin, and was eventually built much later without any consideration for the increases in volumes that have happened, and by the time it was realised that "free flow" junctions were needed, the land needed to make that possible had been sold off to developers, so the solutions were half assed and don't work, and in some cases are downright dangerous. If that were not enough, we then were forced to deal with issues caused by the planning lunacy of putting the LUAS through the middle of the busiest junction (Red Cow) in Ireland. There are other equally bad designs, (Blanchardstown area comes to mind) that could have been built in a different and more appropriate way, but someone clearly thought that a motorway interchange with a canal and railway line through the middle of it all was a good engineering challenge.

    Rail is needed to provide numbers, the problem with buses are twofold. The first is that there's not the will to deal with making sure they can move, so while bus lanes are in theory available, they are (a) abused and (b) not throughout the route, which slows things down significantly. Then there's the problem of dwell times, if a bus stops at an intermediate stop, there's a good chance that every bus behind it will have to stop, as there's not the space to allow them to pass. One Dart carries the equivalent of about 15 buses, and that's why the rail is needed, to move the numbers over significant distances, with the buses then providing the local feeds to and from the rail to the places that people want to go to.

    It's only when the relevant politicians and state services recognise this fact that things might begin to change, but having seen how Dublin has been developed over the last 30 years, I'm not expecting to see any significant changes in my lifetime, the will to make it happen is not there, and won't be, as politicians don't see any value in facing issues that are beyond the next election.

    And yes, driver attitude (especially on the M50) is an issue, maybe if the enforcement was more visible, and active, things might improve, but that's another subject that is not on the agenda, as it doesn't win votes. Some changes to the way that lanes on the M50 are managed might help, it works well in places like Orlando, where barriers are placed between lanes to prevent last second lane hopping, we need similar here, as well as at joins, to prevent the same thing where people hop from the slip to the right hand lane at inappropriate speeds.

    In the longer term, an Eastern by pass would help., as would moving all of Dublin Port, and making that whole area into a high density residential area, with an appropriate commercial mix in that redevelopment, but I don't fancy the job of getting that through "the system", there are just too many hurdles in the way of making that happen

    Shore, if it was easy, everybody would be doin it.😁



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,085 ✭✭✭rn


    The idea of banning traffic is two fold. First it reduces traffic jams for public transport, which vastly improves flow and capacity on the route. Second it forces people to find alternative transport.

    We're used to the easy life the car gives us. But reality is we can't keep squashing stuff into Dublin, as people do seem to want, and have car access.

    Irish life has grown around the availability of the car... We commute crazy distances because we can just about tolerate it.

    Ban the car in city centre. Congestion charge the m50. People will find alternative


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,584 ✭✭✭ligerdub


    The M50 is a glorified car park, but it's park of a bigger problem. The whole city of Dublin is in crisis mode. Getting around Dublin is a near total disaster. If you live near enough to the city (say about 5 miles) then trying to even get on a bus is a bit of a lottery, plenty of places where you'll be watching full buses pass you by.

    All well and good telling people to get the bus or other public transport. In reality most people don't have the Luas or Dart on their doorstep, and the buses are miserable and overcrowded (when you can get on them). I can only assume that Dublin Bus must have significantly fuller coffers than a few years back. Traffic has become noticeably worse in the last 2 or 3 years, particularly if you have to make your way through College Green, which has been absolutely butchered in recent times. Dublin is a lot less enjoyable place to live and work than it used to be.

    Of course all this is happening in a culture of "well if you can't afford to live in [xxxx] then move to [yyyy] and stop complaining". It's this sort of thinking which creates the problem and let's those with the remit to overlook this situation to totally get away with it.

    There seems to be no real method to tackle this issue. The govt gets away with all this because they get a nice celebratory outing every couple of years with some referendum result, sure aren't they great? Smashing job lads! Shane Ross is the Minister for Transport, Eoghan Murphy is the Minister for Housing, what exactly are these 2 up to? Murphy seems more interested in his next triathlon and Ross seems more interested in his next photo op.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,201 ✭✭✭jamesbondings


    amcalester wrote: »
    What improvements can you suggest?

    Arctics and all "work" vehicles to be banned from roads between 7 and 9. Port tunnel price to be reduced to 2 quid for all traffic between this time. Bus lanes to be reduced in areas with a left turn to help ease congestion (ie let the lane fill up on the left).

    Money to be earmarked for cycle ways in and out of the city (cyclists on the road to be fined and penalty points on their car licence).

    Stagger school times to get parents off the roads (school to start at 8.30 finish half an hour earlier).

    Bonkers that the whole country and their dogs need to be in a specific place for between 8 & 9. And mostly in high density areas!


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,705 ✭✭✭Nermal


    I do appreciate it is a nice city, environment (at times) but not so much that national policy should facilitate trying to squeeze more and more in there.

    It has been shown to you that national policy is in fact exactly the opposite, i.e. to starve Dublin of capital investment and spend the revenue it generates elsewhere.

    Despite that, companies still choose to locate there.

    So how about we change national policy to reflect reality? To stop trying to handicap the one globally visible city we have, and to support its further growth?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,246 ✭✭✭✭Hurrache


    Idbatterim wrote: »
    That golf course beside the red cow luas should be CPO'd and used for high density apartments and the same with many of the old business parks etc on 'high quality' transport corridors!.

    There is no golf course beside the Luas park and ride at the Red Cow?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,488 ✭✭✭AdrianII


    Then the port tunnel will be full and the traffic is just passed to another location. The tunnel is 10 at that time for a reason. That is not a solution.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,519 ✭✭✭ozzy jr


    I drove from Dundrum to Belfast today. I left the house at 8.30am.

    The first 15km took 1 hour exactly.

    It took 1 hour and 40 minutes to get to the airport junction.

    I got from the airport to Belfast quicker than from my house to the airport.

    Thankfully I seldom have to use the road at that time.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 40,351 Mod ✭✭✭✭Seth Brundle


    Money to be earmarked for cycle ways in and out of the city (cyclists on the road to be fined and penalty points on their car licence).
    1. All roads?
    2. What if they've no driver's licence?
    3. Why should sustainable transport be punished for using a public road when unsustainable transport is not?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,972 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    Nermal wrote: »
    It has been shown to you that national policy is in fact exactly the opposite, i.e. to starve Dublin of capital investment and spend the revenue it generates elsewhere.

    Despite that, companies still choose to locate there.

    So how about we change national policy to reflect reality? To stop trying to handicap the one globally visible city we have, and to support its further growth?

    Hey, feel free. If the purpose of a government and a society is all about growth. Then yes. Go for it.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 40,351 Mod ✭✭✭✭Seth Brundle


    Hurrache wrote: »
    There is no golf course beside the Luas park and ride at the Red Cow?
    Newlands GC is nearby


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,704 ✭✭✭✭RayCun


    Maybe so as you are already based in the city centre. But if you were looking for a job would you rule out such a company if it was based in Leixlip or would you just accept that as a reality.

    Change is not easy, look it the decentralisation fiasco. But where new businesses are considering location, they should be directed to alternative locations where possible.

    True story, I had a phone interview with a company last year, and one of the reasons they gave for not proceeding was where I lived relative to them. They knew the commute would have me looking for another job sooner or later.

    Think of it like this. If you base a company on O'Connell street, there are thousands and thousands of people who are within walking distance of your workplace, tens of thousands of people who are within half an hour of you, and literally hundreds of thousands of people who can commute to you in under an hour. That is your pool of potential employees, more or less.

    The bus connects site has/had an interactive map, where you pick a spot on the map and it shows you how far you can get in 30 minutes or 60 minutes. That kind of thing is a major factor in company location - how many people can get to us in a reasonable period of time? Will we be able to hire the people we need to?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,246 ✭✭✭✭Hurrache


    Newlands GC is nearby

    Yes, but that's not the Red Cow.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,704 ✭✭✭✭RayCun


    The purpose of transport policy should be to make it possible for most people to get where they need to go in the shortest and easiest way. And it is impossible to do that with a car-centric policy. The space we have available for transport should be used for high capacity modes of transport - bikes and public transport, with cars as the lowest priority.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 63 ✭✭tomplate


    RayCun wrote: »
    The space we have available for transport should be used for high capacity modes of transport - bikes


    ok


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,085 ✭✭✭rn


    RayCun wrote: »
    The space we have available for transport should be used for high capacity modes of transport - bikes and public transport, with cars as the lowest priority.

    Could not agree more. Build a large no of multi story just off the m50. Bus, luas or Bike it in from there.


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