Feedback sought on plan to open mall to buses
NEWS RELEASE
6 November 2008
Feedback sought on
plan to open mall to buses
Wellingtonians are being
asked what they think about proposed central city changes,
including once again allowing buses through Manners
Mall.
The changes – outlined online at
www.Wellington.govt.nz and in booklets available at
libraries – aim to strengthen the Golden Mile and provide
a more direct and obvious public transport route, reducing
delays for bus users. They include altered bus and general
traffic routes, relocated bus stops, new traffic lights on
the three pedestrian crossings in Courtenay Place, more than
50 new on-street car parking spaces mainly in Dixon and
Wakefield streets, and street improvements in lower Cuba,
Wakefield, Mercer and Dixon streets and at either end of
what is now Manners Mall.
The proposal to allow
buses to once again travel the length of Manners Street in
both directions would significantly alter the mall. A
roadway would be developed down the centre with wide paved
footpaths on either side, much like those at the Willis
Street-end of Manners Street. General traffic would continue
to use most existing routes but would no longer be able to
turn right from Victoria Street into Manners
Street.
The Council’s Urban Development and
Transport Portfolio Leader, Councillor Andy Foster, says
preliminary discussions over the last few months with a wide
range of people and organisations have been largely
positive
“We believe these proposals potentially
have significant benefits for shoppers, retailers, bus
users, cyclists and pedestrians but we are very keen to hear
what Wellingtonians think of the idea before we consider
this further,” he says. “We are also taking this
opportunity to find out what people think of plans to extend
the 30kmh speed limit that already exists in Lambton Quay
and Willis Street to the rest of the Golden Mile – Manners
Street and Courtenay Place – to help make the city safer
for pedestrians.”
Cr Foster says re-routing buses
through Manners Mall would restore the Golden Mile – which
runs from the bus terminus in Lambton Quay, through Willis
Street and Manners Street to the Embassy-end of Courtenay
Place.
The route was traditionally the main retail
and public transport spine Trams and then buses used it
until the late 1970s when Manners Mall was built and north
and southbound routes diverged – heading into town along
Dixon and Willis streets and out, via Mercer, Wakefield and
lower Cuba streets.
“Internationally, public
transport systems work best when routes are obvious and an
important part of that is making sure buses travelling in
each direction share the same roads,” he says. “A more
direct route with fewer difficult corners and congested
intersections will significantly reduce bus travel times
through the CBD and help improve the reliability of the
service.”
The Council is looking closely at all
aspects of its operation at the moment and has some tough
decisions to make over the next eight months about
priorities and spending as it reviews the Long Term Council
Community Plan (2009-2019), which Wellingtonians will get to
comment on next year.
The roading and street
improvements being proposed to strengthen the Golden Mile
can potentially be funded over the next five years using
money that has already been budgeted for bus priority and
urban redevelopment work and it is likely some aspects will
attract New Zealand Transport Agency
funding.
City Councillors will consider the
proposal early next year along with the feedback from the
community and depending on the results of the consultation,
the project will be assessed against other
projects.
Council staff will be in Manners Mall to
answer questions on Friday 21 November, 8am-5pm, and
Saturday 22 November, 11am-3pm. Feedback is required by
Friday 5
December.
ends