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M6 - is the Galway Bypass necessary? (thread split)

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Perhaps the person who made the comment originally might care to answer that question.






    I was being slightly mischievous of course, but now that this point has been raised I'd be interested to hear what the GCOB proponents have to say about it.

    So you'll complain people are being "pedantic" when legitimately trying to help you when it appears you're having IT problems, yet are willing to misrepresent yourself to try and cause argument amongst those against you?

    Have you considered politics?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭antoobrien


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Dear oh dear. Such peevish and pedantic point-scoring and nitpicking about extraneous details.
    Coming from you that's more than a bit rich.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Are you psychically able to draw conclusions about the state of my eyesight?
    I find it convenient that suddenly when questioned you can't open the a document you reference figures from regularly (the 2006 city traffic study).
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Perhaps the person who made the comment originally might care to answer that question.

    You are aware of the concept of a rhetorical question right? Silly question, obviously not.

    Given a choice, and absent a reason to go into town, motorists will choose to use a relief road, bypass or ring road.

    See the Athlone DC and M50 for examples of people avoiding a town center.

    See Waterford as an example of what not to do in Galway (put a toll on a bypass).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    So you'll complain people are being "pedantic" when legitimately trying to help you when it appears you're having IT problems, yet are willing to misrepresent yourself to try and cause argument amongst those against you?

    Have you considered politics?



    Misunderstanding, it seems. I misread what you wrote and lumped it in with the previous comment.

    Can we now drop the side-talk about PDFs, zooming, scroll bars and my less than 20/20 vision? Please?

    I was not misrepresenting anything. It was a naughty move, I'll admit, but it made a point: even strong proponents of the GCOB do not seem to be in complete agreement as to what it's for and who it's supposed to serve.

    But never mind that, I'll try to address the points recently raised, now that I'm on a PC.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    I was not misrepresenting anything. It was a naughty move, I'll admit, but it made a point: even strong proponents of the GCOB do not seem to be in complete agreement as to what it's for and who it's supposed to serve.

    I'd be rather worried if everyone supporting or opposing something had identical viewpoints, in all honesty. I don't see how its an issue.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    So, the lead authority for the GCOB is Galway Co Co, and they have consciously locked the citizenry into long-term car dependence. They want the Bypass to alleviate traffic problems they helped to create!

    antoobrien wrote: »
    Not really, that would be BE & IR, who fail to put in place any PT alternatives.

    Ah, so the head is out of the sand, you acknowledge that the city traffic problems are not all due to the 40% of trips of 0-4 km distances - when you consider that 26% of people walk (I know 1 person in Galway & Dublin that will walk more than 4km to work/school - me) that always seemed rather like grasping at straws.

    Oh by the way, the lack of planning in the city is more than partially responsible for the mess - why not run and try to sort it out?



    Are you serious? Really really serious? You post a link to this map and then you lay the blame for the non-provision of public transport with Bus Eireann and Iarnrod Eireann? And then you go on to suggest that MY head is in the sand!!! Laugh? I nearly dropped my little netbook...

    One-off housing (an oxymoronic term, now that I think of it) made up 80% of Co. Galway completions in 2009. This was due to a massive fall-off in apartment construction, rather than an upsurge in bungalow blitz. There were c. 1000 one-off completions in Co. Galway in 2009, half the annual peak output of about 2000 one-offs during the Celtic Casino years. (Source: paper by James Nix on the Irish Planning Institute website)

    The costs of providing all services, such as electricity, road repair, post and bin collection are much higher in rural areas, according to the above report. School transport in rural areas, for example, costs about five times as much as in urban areas:
    The school transport scheme costs approx €200m a year. Of the 135,000 pupils carried annually, about 8,000 are students with special needs, and 30% of the cost is attributable to these pupils. Contributions make up 5% of the overall cost. Therefore, around €130 million a year is attributable to mainstream primary and secondary pupils. The annual subsidy per pupil works out at €1,025 per year, which equates to around €2.80 per journey for each student.

    Subsidies for rural school transport are far higher than urban bus subsidies. The operating subvention for Dublin Bus was €86m in 2008, but because urban buses are more intensively used, with around 410,000 trips a day in the case of Dublin Bus, the average subsidy per journey is around 57 cent.
    So is this what the neo rural dwellers expect? Higher subsidies for public transport so they can have buses on the boreens and trains near the cart tracks?

    Either that or a shiny new bypass at taxpayers' expense to make their (often self imposed) car dependence less time-consuming?

    Galway County Council has been strongly condemned for its highly questionable approach to "planning" and is one of a number of local authorities whose practices in this regard were targeted by government for an independent review last year. IIRC Galway City Council was not similarly criticised, though they still have a lot of other things to answer for.

    Scepticism and "head in the sand" are not synonymous. I have always acknowledged that stupid "planning" in the city and county have directly led to traffic congestion. The unsustainably large volume of traffic entering or crossing the city is a direct result of the "planners" folly, of this country's populist politics and of the cumulative decisions of thousands of citizens who build "one-off" houses in the country for whatever reason.

    I am sceptical of the GCOB proposal because (a) those same "planners" haven't gone away you know, and (b) I don't think either our populist 'leaders' or our compliant insouciant car-dependent citizenry should be rewarded with a bypass for this mass muppetry.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    Connemara etc need a safe and speed-reliable route to beyond Galway (be it Dublin or indeed anywhere), probably better to state they need a safe and speed reliable route to east of the Corrib.

    Knocknacarra isn't rural. Barna is a substantial enough town, as is Spiddal. Oughterard and Moycullen are bigger again and there is a fair amount of specialised industry in these areas - ranging from biochem, to fire engine manufacture, to radiators.

    These areas are not car dependent in and of themselves but due to there being extremely poor public transport - something made worse by how poor the roads are - they are.

    Those in one-off houses can get lost, but there are more than enough actually sustainable towns and villages/communities beyond those. This isn't required because of bungalow blight but because of actual places with groups of people, industries, tourism etc.



    For various reasons -- social, economic and cultural -- I am willing to support the principle that Connemara needs to be aided with infrastructural development. Tourism is hugely important, now more than ever, and Galway City should be a gateway not a barrier.

    However, is there a coherent regional strategy, including a transportation plan, for such development? Or is it a case of stick in a bypass and hope for the best?

    I've already referred to the public transport and road maintenance issue. The externalised costs of our sporadic and uncoordinated development has an awful lot to do with these deficiencies.

    "Those in one-off houses can get lost". It is you who say it! There's an awful lot of them, though. And where are they going to get lost, now that there's hardly a boreen without a bungalow?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    You don't appear to be aware that the GCOB was designed by the Galway RDO on direction of the NRA, not the planning department.

    The GCOB would be required had there been zero one off houses or twice the current number. There are villages, towns, and industries west of the Corrib which need a road that doesn't go through Galway to get anywhere east of the Corrib.

    That you're combining replies to separate issues as if they were part of the same reply to suit your answer doesn't reflect well either.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    However, is there a coherent regional strategy, including a transportation plan, for such development? Or is it a case of stick in a bypass and hope for the best?

    As I said in my previous reply, the bypass planning was done at the direction of the NRA who plan on a national basis.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    "Those in one-off houses can get lost". It is you who say it! There's an awful lot of them, though. And where are they going to get lost, now that there's hardly a boreen without a bungalow?

    I meant in terms of service/transport provision. They chose to live in an entirely unsustainable manner, whereas those who live in towns and villages have a right to expect proper services - be that broadband, sewerage or safe roads that can actually get them places in a reasonable period of time


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    You don't appear to be aware that the GCOB was designed by the Galway RDO on direction of the NRA, not the planning department.

    The GCOB would be required had there been zero one off houses or twice the current number. There are villages, towns, and industries west of the Corrib which need a road that doesn't go through Galway to get anywhere east of the Corrib.

    That you're combining replies to separate issues as if they were part of the same reply to suit your answer doesn't reflect well either.


    When I refer to "planning" I am talking about the consequences of accumulated, though often uncoordinated, decisions of the various authorities and others that have given rise to vociferous demands for a bypass.

    The current "ring road" as referred to by the NRA was supposed to serve such purposes, was it not?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    As I said in my previous reply, the bypass planning was done at the direction of the NRA who plan on a national basis.

    I meant in terms of service/transport provision. They chose to live in an entirely unsustainable manner, whereas those who live in towns and villages have a right to expect proper services - be that broadband, sewerage or safe roads that can actually get them places in a reasonable period of time



    1. Indeed. And now that we are where we are the NRA is shifting the focus from construction of a bypass to traffic management. Hence the new regime of ripping out roundabouts etc?

    2. I know. Towns and villages haven't been sustainably developed either, though. You may recall that the proximal cause of Galway City's notorious cryptosporidium outbreak in 2007 was Oughterard sewage.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    When I refer to "planning" I am talking about the consequences of accumulated, though often uncoordinated, decisions of the various authorities and others that have given rise to vociferous demands for a bypass.

    The demands would exist either way, as has been said repeatedly.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    The current "ring road" as referred to by the NRA was supposed to serve such purposes, was it not?

    The current ring road was assembled out of a number of separate projects in the 1990s to provide temporary relief. Suggesting that it ever had a designated purpose is stretching it. The fact that it goes from being relatively high quality (bar the roundabouts) in to east to being single carriageway and veering back in towards the city to use a 1980s bridge before ending up on what was until recently a two lane road (and is being slowly widened to add some bus lanes) shows that it was never a coherent project.

    If you want to give it a designated purpose, it was to give Galway five more years to build a proper bypass. We're approaching 20.

    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    1. Indeed. And now that we are where we are the NRA is shifting the focus from construction of a bypass to traffic management. Hence the new regime with ripping out roundabouts etc?

    The traffic lights instead of roundabouts is Galway City Council not the NRA. The NRA only holds operational control on motorways (for the moment) with the rest falling to the county or borough authority.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    2. I know. Towns and villages haven't been sustainably developed either, though. You may recall that the proximal cause of Galway City's notorious cryptosporidium outbreak in 2007 was Oughterard sewage.

    Sewerage - right forum, wrong thread. All the towns and villages have grown massively giving rise to more transport requirements which is what this thread is dealing with.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    The demands would exist either way, as has been said repeatedly.

    The current ring road was assembled out of a number of separate projects in the 1990s to provide temporary relief. Suggesting that it ever had a designated purpose is stretching it. The fact that it goes from being relatively high quality (bar the roundabouts) in to east to being single carriageway and veering back in towards the city to use a 1980s bridge before ending up on what was until recently a two lane road (and is being slowly widened to add some bus lanes) shows that it was never a coherent project.

    If you want to give it a designated purpose, it was to give Galway five more years to build a proper bypass. We're approaching 20.

    The traffic lights instead of roundabouts is Galway City Council not the NRA. The NRA only holds operational control on motorways (for the moment) with the rest falling to the county or borough authority.

    Sewerage - right forum, wrong thread. All the towns and villages have grown massively giving rise to more transport requirements which is what this thread is dealing with.



    Popular demand also, as in the hoo-ha stirred up by Frank Fahey et al.

    The N6 upgrade, including the conversion of roundabouts to signalised junctions along with the implementation of an AUTC, is at the very least of strategic interest to the NRA.

    Excerpts from the NRA's National Roads Traffic Management Study:
    In Galway the strategic road network is still under development, and the existing Bóthar na dTreabh (N6) provides the function of a city bypass, but also has been subject to development of significant volumes of retail activity which hamper the ability of that road to achieve its primary function. There is therefore significant need to restore an appropriate level of safety and efficiency of the national road network in that area pending delivery of the Outer Bypass.

    In the absence of the GCOB, the Galway Ring Road continues to provide connectivity between the major radial routes. Nevertheless, although constructed as a City Bypass, the existing Ring Road (Bóthar na dTreabh) has supported significant growth in retail and low-density employment uses which have been displaced from the City Centre by this infrastructure. This has led to significant erosion in the level of service provided by the ring road, leading to an inability to achieve its originally desired function.

    The Traffic Management Study objectives set out a clear hierarchy of road users and required functions of a National Primary Route. In the case of the Galway Ring Road, it is evident that significant interventions are necessary in order to provide for the needs of the road, whilst considering the range of existing users along that corridor.

    The ring road comprises a mixture of single and dual carriageway connecting the N6 with the N59. Whilst the at-grade roundabouts represent a key capacity constraint, it is noted that these roundabouts also provide access to numerous retail and commercial developments along the corridor, and as such any capacity increase would require such access to be considered. Whilst subject to more detailed design studies, a Traffic Management Study for Galway is therefore likely to include a number of initiatives which may include:

    • Major enhancements at up to six existing at-grade junctions to improve traffic flow, provide for pedestrian/cycle movement and improve traffic safety;
    • Removal of direct accesses where possible to protect traffic flow;
    • Provision of new link roads to improve access to new grade separated junctions;
    • Provision for high-value road users (Freight/Public Transport etc); and
    • Significant investment in Smarter Travel policies and infrastructure to reduce car demand.


    It is envisaged that a Traffic Management Study could deliver significant benefit to Galway City as an interim measure pending construction of the GCOB. The existing layout of the Galway Ring Road lends itself to significant scope for improvement, although the appropriate management of development clusters will be a significant requirement to ensure that the benefits of such a strategy can be fully captured.
    Traffic management is where it's at currently, it would appear. Those who yearn for the GCOB to solve a range of problems will have much to ponder as they sit in their cars for the next few years.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    "Bother na dTreabh" is the DC/part of the S4 section (N18 to N84) of the existing route only, IWH. Its about half of the entire ring road, nothing more.

    The NRA and indeed everyone except you it appears recognise the rest (N84 to R336) is unsalvagable. This includes the Corrib crossing which is the entire need for the outer bypass!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    "Bother na dTreabh" is the DC/part of the S4 section (N18 to N84) of the existing route only, IWH. Its about half of the entire ring road, nothing more.

    The NRA and indeed everyone except you it appears recognise the rest (N84 to R336) is unsalvagable. This includes the Corrib crossing which is the entire need for the outer bypass!




    N84 to R336? Sorry, I find that a bit confusing. According to the Google map I'm looking at, the N84 is the Headford Road and the R336, in the relevant part of the city, is called the Tuam Road locally (closer to town, well before it becomes the N17).

    Is the Quincentenary Bridge not the N6, which is also Bothar na dTreabh?

    Anyway, perhaps my confusion is due to Google Maps mis-labelling.

    The key word in your post above, IMO, is unsalvageable. In the absence of a GCOB this is recognised and that is why the immediate focus is on traffic management.

    This is a good thing, IMO, because it forces Galway City, at last, to look seriously at transportation policies other than facilitating motorised traffic.

    The N6 upgrade (removal of roundabouts etc) is intended to improve motorised traffic flow, but it is also linked to measures aimed at facilitating bus users, cyclists and pedestrians.

    But the word unsalvageable refers back to my original point: the Bypass should not be about temporarily rescuing us from policies and practices that led to massive car dependence and traffic congestion in the first place.

    If Galway City were granted a bypass without any serious and enforceable measures to ensure that it is not used to facilitate more developer-led "planning" that will generate yet more car traffic, then it will eventually become unsalvageable too. We can't go on building more and more roads that just give rise to more and more car-dependent and traffic-generating development. It is simply not sustainable.

    Those who regard the GCOB as essential infrastructure, a car driver's dream or a developer's gold-mine may take heart from the headline in the latest issue of the Galway Advertiser: "City outer bypass to be included in new national development plan".

    So far so good for the GCOB proponents, though they will still have to wait a while for a decision from the European Court of Justice, before the matter possibly goes back to the Supreme Court in Ireland.

    So, we have some GCOB proponents arguing that "any traffic improvements for the city are nearly entirely unconnected to the bypass" and others arguing that its purpose is to remove traffic from the city centre so that public transport, cycling and walking may prosper.

    And then there are the sceptics, of which I'm one, who are disgusted by what passes for "planning" in this country and who are concerned about the influence of 'developers' behind projects touted as essential infrastructure.

    I have already argued that one of the main drivers for the bypass in Galway is the fact that current levels of traffic congestion are holding up new developments such as the Ceannt Station/Galway Harbour plans, which if they come to fruition will make many millions for a small but powerful elite.

    The Ceannt Station proposal includes 2055 car parking spaces, 75% of them for commercial and residential use smack bang in the city centre. Bumper to bumper that number of cars would stretch from Eyre Square to Clarenbridge. Of course a Bypass is needed to facilitate such developer-led "planning"!

    Am I wrong? No, because if I was, new FG TD Brian Walsh, no slouch when it comes to lucrative property development, wouldn't be agreeing with me in today's Galway Advertiser:
    "The bypass is not only critical from the point of view of alleviating traffic congestion but it is also integral to facilitating the redevelopment of Galway Harbour, because access is going to be a major consideration in deciding whether planning is granted in respect of that project."
    So there you have it: a key aim of the GCOB is to remove traffic from Galway City to make room for the traffic that will be generated by the new city centre development that will be facilitated by the GCOB!

    In the case of the Quincentenary Bridge, orginally touted as the cure for Galway's traffic congestion, it was about ten years before traffic-generating development around the "ring road" started to cause congestion.

    How long will it take for GCOB-related induced traffic to become unsalvageable, I wonder?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭antoobrien


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Are you serious? Really really serious? You post a link to this map and then you lay the blame for the non-provision of public transport with Bus Eireann and Iarnrod Eireann? And then you go on to suggest that MY head is in the sand!!! Laugh? I nearly dropped my little netbook...

    Consider the fact that PT along the n17/18 is piss poor, non existant west of the Corrib and it would seem that there is no bus route serving the N63 either. Galway county has a population of 250,000 - 2/3 of which does not live in the Galway smarter travel area (I refuse to refer to it as the metropolitan area like they do in the document). Consider the fact that at least half the population lives in towns & villages (take a look at the 2006 census).

    Iwannahurl wrote: »

    Please fix the link.

    Also since you seem to be able to find such trivia, would you care to find the number of one offs in counties Louth, Carlow, Dublin, Longford & Letrim for the same timeframe. When you combine these 5 counties their combined (6,620 sq km) area is 471 sq km greater than county Galway (6,149 sq km), so I'd expect to see only 1,200 one offs.

    Remember one thing, when the bypass planning started in 1999, they were working off the 1996 cencus figures which put the total population of Co Galway at 188,854 (57,241 + 133,613). It's now 250,541 (75,414 + 175,127).

    Now consider the population of the commuter areas in that map has increased, while local employment has fallen and they're having to travel to Galway.

    GCOB has about as much to do with one off housing as the M50 or Athlone DC have.


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    N84 to R336? Sorry, I find that a bit confusing. According to the Google map I'm looking at, the N84 is the Headford Road and the R336, in the relevant part of the city, is called the Tuam Road locally (closer to town, well before it becomes the N17).

    Is the Quincentenary Bridge not the N6, which is also Bothar na dTreabh?

    Anyway, perhaps my confusion is due to Google Maps mis-labelling.
    I don't trust google maps for placenames - the Monivea Rd is labeled Ballybrit until Carnmore cross, when Ballybrit ends at Ballybrit Rd (often referred to as Parkmore Rd).

    The confusion here is caused by the re-designation of the Quincentenary Bridge to the N6 (not sure when it happened). I believe BNT was originally the name for the section between the Headford Road (N84) and the Monivea rd @ Ballybane (R339), I'm not aware of a seperate name for the stretch between the Tuam Rd and Ballybane. Ah well, I'll just have to buy a map at the weekend.


  • Registered Users Posts: 802 ✭✭✭kiwipower


    I still see lots of arguments from you.
    But as I asked in an earlier post, what are your proposed solutions to Galways' traffic problems? Solutions that support ALL members of the community? Not just those that are fully mobile, live in a bus shelter, on their cycles, in Galway City and don't have to travel more than 4km?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    N84 to R336? Sorry, I find that a bit confusing. According to the Google map I'm looking at, the N84 is the Headford Road and the R336, in the relevant part of the city, is called the Tuam Road locally (closer to town, well before it becomes the N17).

    Is the Quincentenary Bridge not the N6, which is also Bothar na dTreabh?

    The R336 at the locaiton I'm referring to is the road to Connemara. If you know the 'ring road' you'll know exactly what I mean. More insight that you don't actually know Galway at all.

    The road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    How long will it take for GCOB-related induced traffic to become unsalvageable, I wonder?

    Seeing as its nowhere near the city and hence not going to induce traffic in it, never.

    What is your purpose in arguing against this? You came on here as some form of road safety campaigner and now you're arguing against a road which will make travelling safer for thousands daily.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    antoobrien wrote: »
    Consider the fact that PT along the n17/18 is piss poor, non existant west of the Corrib and it would seem that there is no bus route serving the N63 either. Galway county has a population of 250,000 - 2/3 of which does not live in the Galway smarter travel area (I refuse to refer to it as the metropolitan area like they do in the document). Consider the fact that at least half the population lives in towns & villages (take a look at the 2006 census).

    Please fix the link.

    Also since you seem to be able to find such trivia, would you care to find the number of one offs in counties Louth, Carlow, Dublin, Longford & Letrim for the same timeframe. When you combine these 5 counties their combined (6,620 sq km) area is 471 sq km greater than county Galway (6,149 sq km), so I'd expect to see only 1,200 one offs.

    Remember one thing, when the bypass planning started in 1999, they were working off the 1996 cencus figures which put the total population of Co Galway at 188,854 (57,241 + 133,613). It's now 250,541 (75,414 + 175,127).

    Now consider the population of the commuter areas in that map has increased, while local employment has fallen and they're having to travel to Galway.

    GCOB has about as much to do with one off housing as the M50 or Athlone DC have.

    I don't trust google maps for placenames - the Monivea Rd is labeled Ballybrit until Carnmore cross, when Ballybrit ends at Ballybrit Rd (often referred to as Parkmore Rd).

    The confusion here is caused by the re-designation of the Quincentenary Bridge to the N6 (not sure when it happened). I believe BNT was originally the name for the section between the Headford Road (N84) and the Monivea rd @ Ballybane (R339), I'm not aware of a seperate name for the stretch between the Tuam Rd and Ballybane. Ah well, I'll just have to buy a map at the weekend.


    James Nix paper attached.

    James Nix paper to Irish Planning Institute 2010.pdf


    I wouldn't argue that Bus Eireann and Iarnrod Eireann have no room for improvement.

    There is no disputing that we have what one Boards member euphemistically and with unintended humour described as a "distributed society".

    Is there sufficient population in these areas to make public transport viable? In some cases I very much doubt that, and in others BE may be at fault or may not have the resources.

    Do you disagree with Nix's analysis that, for example, rural school transport costs on average five times more than in urban areas?

    Galway's traffic congestion has an awful lot to do with sporadic and uncoordinated development in rural areas, and that congestion is routinely used as an argument for the GCOB. Galway City and County Councils have officially been of that view for years (eg as in the GTPS published in 2002) though you wouldn't think that with the way their "planners" behave.

    You will notice that the GCOB route includes a link to the Western Distributor Road.

    Do you think the current residents of that side of Galway, some in Knocknatallaght and many other in "one-off" houses built in bogs and up cart tracks aren't delighted at the thought of a bypass on their doorstep?

    Do you think that there isn't latent demand for building more rustic haciendas that will be unleashed by a bypass?

    Do you think that good old Irish gombeenism and the GCOB won't ever find common (boggy) ground?

    Why do you suppose Frank "Forty Gaffs" Fahey was putting up illegal signs touting the bypass in that part of the constituency a while back? By the way, his pro-GCOB stunt, http://www.isupportthebypass.com, seems to have bitten the dust along with his seat. Aw shucks.







    EDIT: A thought occurs. If planning for a bypass started in 1999, fifteen years after the new bridge opened, may this is an indicator that the "ring road" had already been swallowed up with traffic generating development and that they already knew what they were doing "planning" wise was not going to be salvageable.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    kiwipower wrote: »
    I still see lots of arguments from you.
    But as I asked in an earlier post, what are your proposed solutions to Galways' traffic problems? Solutions that support ALL members of the community? Not just those that are fully mobile, live in a bus shelter, on their cycles, in Galway City and don't have to travel more than 4km?



    I hadn't forgotten.

    The "Smarter Travel" plan, for a start.

    Personally I'd love to see congestion charging in the longer term. If feasible that could be used to fund more PT and P&R, I would imagine.

    Removal of on-street parking on some city routes, along with a rigorous parking management strategy that includes 'performance pricing' to reduce parking-related congestion and put money back into making the city more conducive for shopping etc. Also a 'parking route' like they have in some European cities where cars are routed away from a central zone and there is sufficient parking on the route where people can leave their cars.

    Overhaul of the school transport system to make it much more user-friendly for city dwellers.

    30 kph zone in the city.

    A larger car-free zone in the city.

    Opening up of one-way streets to bicycles.

    They're just some ideas off the top of my head, in no particular order. The overall priority, as I would see it, is to first deal with all the excuses people have for preferring to chew their own arm off rather than leave their car. Having offered a large bunch of sweet carrots, then wield the economic stick. Or maybe you need to do both simultaneously.

    For the record, I do not support ANY members of the community who merely "like" using their car in the city, as per Galway Chamber of Commerce. Any traffic and transportation plan for Galway City must prioritise sustainability and the greater good, not the mere desires of car owners.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    The R336 at the locaiton I'm referring to is the road to Connemara. If you know the 'ring road' you'll know exactly what I mean. More insight that you don't actually know Galway at all.

    The road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge.

    Seeing as its nowhere near the city and hence not going to induce traffic in it, never.

    What is your purpose in arguing against this? You came on here as some form of road safety campaigner and now you're arguing against a road which will make travelling safer for thousands daily.


    1. Link to the R336 location on Google Maps please.

    2. Your insight is unreliable.

    3. It's the Quincentenary Bridge, officially.

    4. "The road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge." Really? According to Google Maps, approx 750 metres from the Pillo Hotel at the roundabout opposite the Menlo Park Hotel (beginning of Bothar na dTreabh) to the Galway Shopping Centre (at the magic roundabout just before Quincentenary Bridge).

    5. I have already posted a link to a newspaper article in which a Galway TD emphatically states that the GCOB is also needed to take traffic out of the city in order to facilitate new development in the harbour area. The Ceannt Station element of that plan on its own includes 2055 car parking spaces. How will that not induce traffic?

    6. Road safety campaigning and GCOB scepticism are not mutually exclusive. As someone else has argued in this thread, I think, removing traffic with a bypass could make the city streets more dangerous for vulnerable road users if it led to higher free speeds on average.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    1. Link to the R336 location on Google Maps please.

    Would be seen as the very end of what is the current patched together "ring road", albeit more traffic would use the Kingston Road to access the R336 from it.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    2. Your insight is unreliable.

    Clearly not.

    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    3. It's the Quincentenary Bridge, officially.

    And you attack people for pedantry...
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    4. "The road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge." Really? According to Google Maps, approx 750 metres from the Pillo Hotel at the roundabout opposite the Menlo Park Hotel (beginning of Bothar na dTreabh) to the Galway Shopping Centre (at the magic roundabout just before Quincentenary Bridge).

    ...which can be fifteen minutes drive in rush hour... its nowhere near in terms of traffic.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    5. I have already posted a link to a newspaper article in which a Galway TD emphatically states that the GCOB is also needed to take traffic out of the city in order to facilitate new development in the harbour area. The Ceannt Station element of that plan on its own includes 2055 car parking spaces. How will that not induce traffic?

    The GCOB won't take *any* traffic out of the harbour area as it does not serve traffic going anywhere near it. This is blatantly clear to anyone who's actually been in Galway for more than a weekend.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    6. Road safety campaigning and GCOB scepticism are not mutually exclusive. As someone else has argued in this thread, I think, removing traffic with a bypass could make the city streets more dangerous for vulnerable road users if it led to higher free speeds on average.

    Bring in your beloved enforcement then. Its not even a fraction of a valid argument against the bypass.

    And if removing traffic would make the city streets more dangerous for cyclists why are you for, erm, removing traffic by means of public transport to make it more condusive to cyclists? Talking out of both sides of your mouth. Can't have it both ways.

    Will removing traffic make it safer or more dangerous? Pick a viewpoint and stop trying to represent both.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭antoobrien


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    James Nix paper attached.

    James Nix paper to Irish Planning Institute 2010.pdf


    Thanks for the doc, I'll consider both posts properly after work and get back to you.

    Without having read the document, there's one item that I never hear mentioned when people mention one off housing in Co. Galway, it's an area with historically low urban populations, so it's not like the concept is a new one. But please don't trust me on that, check the census figures.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    EDIT: A thought occurs. If planning for a bypass started in 1999, fifteen years after the new bridge opened, may this is an indicator that the "ring road" had already been swallowed up with traffic generating development and that they already knew what they were doing "planning" wise was not going to be salvageable.

    I never remember it being referred to as a "ring road" until they pedestrianized Shop Street (approx 1999/2000), creating the "inner ring" and "outer ring" roads and only then on road signs (are those road signs still up, not on Eyre Sq any more at any rate).

    At any rate I object to the use of "ring road" as the name implies that it is an outer route. This road goes within a few minutes walk of Eyre Square. Also, with the exception of the last section between Briarhill & Doughiska, the so called "Galway Ring Road" passes through business & residential areas that existed before the road was built.

    Now, if you would, consider that the dual carriageway between Briarhill and Doughiska was opened in 95/96 to complete this relief road. They started planning for the bypass in 1999 based on the NRA's road needs survey (where the concept of the national dc/motorway network came from). To me that's an attempt at forward planning to rectify problems that have not been fully resolved by the measures taken. No doubt you'll disagree on most if not all of this.

    You keep saying things like "if planning for a bypass started in 1999" - it did, I'm not the only person in Galway whose family had the brochure with the proposed routes posted out to our house in the early part of the last decade.

    Here's another item for you to consider, taken from Retail Strategy for Galway City published in 2002:
    Galway City has a County -wide catchment area in particular for comparison shopping. This dominant position of Galway is confirmed and the dependence of towns even as far away as Clifden on the services provided in Galway is indicated. This is clear also from the results of the floorspace survey (section 3).

    The county towns predominantly function as providers of day to day shopping
    requirements. Shoppers to these towns come from the immediate catchment with the exception of Loughrea, which appears to have a marginally wider catchment coming from the South- East of the county.

    Traffic congestion and poor car parking facilities were identified as a problem everywhere but in particular in Loughrea and Athenry. This has a strong negative impact in County towns especially where most shoppers are car borne.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,110 ✭✭✭KevR


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    EDIT: A thought occurs. If planning for a bypass started in 1999, fifteen years after the new bridge opened, may this is an indicator that the "ring road" had already been swallowed up with traffic generating development and that they already knew what they were doing "planning" wise was not going to be salvageable.

    Can anyone put a percentage figure on the expansion of Galway City's road network 1991-2006??

    I think we can safely assume that it hasn't expanded by 42.4% !!!!!!!

    There is no denying that there have been some very bad planning decisions in Galway City and County over the years but the fact still remains that population growth in Galway City (and County) has been huge and that increases in road capacity have been shockingly low in comparison.
    Population (1991-2006)
    • Ireland has experienced a population growth of 20.3% over the past fifteen years and the West Region has grown by 20.8%. Galway City’s population, by contrast, has grown by 42.4% over the same period, the forth largest growth experienced overall and the fastest growth experience of any county outside the Greater Dublin Area.

    • The fastest growing EDs within Galway City are Barna (187.3%), Ballybaan (133.4%), Ballybrit (125.5%), Eyre Square (111.2%) and Castlegar (107.8%), all of which more than doubled their population.

    • Only few areas registered a population decline, including Newcastle (-35.2%), Renmore (-27.5%), Mervue (-26.4%), Lough Atalia (-17.7%) and Nuns Island (-14.6%).
    https://www.pobal.ie/WhatWeDo/Deprivation/Publications/1.1.26%20Area%20Profile%20-%20Galway%20City%20report.pdf


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭antoobrien


    KevR wrote: »
    Can anyone put a percentage figure on the expansion of Galway City's road network 1991-2006??

    In that timeframe there were 2 roads built that I can think of: the Western Distributer Road through Knocknacara & the Ballybrit & Doughiska dual carriageways (I'm ignoring the Doughiska to Oranmore because it's not in the city, the digital roundabout at Ballybane was opened before '91 IIRC). That's maybe 7km of roads.

    Edit: possibly Bothar Ui Hehir (Tuam Rd to College Rd/Foster St) as well

    Meanwhile we've lost O'Briens Bridge to Westbound traffic due to the pedestrianization of Shop St.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,106 ✭✭✭antoobrien


    http://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/43700/city-outer-bypass-to-be-included-in-new-national-development-plan
    The Galway City Outer Bypass will form part of the new National Development Plan, the contents of which are due to be revealed in October, it was confirmed last night.

    Several major roads projects are expected to be omitted from the new capital expenditure programme as the department seeks to scale back its plans in line with the present economic circumstances. However, Galway West TD Brian Walsh received confirmation from the Minister for Transport Leo Varadkar last night that he is prepared to include the Galway City Outer Bypass as a priority in the new programme.

    It is understood that the proposed outer bypass was one of the highest-ranking roads project in the State in terms of cost-benefit analysis conducted by the Department of Transport in relation to every proposed roads currently under consideration by the Government.

    Welcoming the commitment from Minister Varadkar, Dep Walsh said the inclusion of the bypass in the new National Development Plan would “pave the way” for the project to be expedited pending a decision from the European Court of Justice, following a referral from the Supreme Court for a preliminary ruling on matters concerning EU Law.

    “I recently wrote to the Minister seeking reaffirmation that the bypass was still a priority for the Government in spite of the fiscal constraints and I am delighted with his response,” he said.

    “The chaotic traffic congestion of recent weeks has served to highlight that the need for an outer bypass has never been greater and the inclusion of the project in the new plan signals that the Government remains committed to making it a reality.”

    Dep Walsh said the reason the bypass has been in the pipeline for more than 14 years is due to a lack of “political will to bring it to fruition”.

    “The bypass is not only critical from the point of view of alleviating traffic congestion but it is also integral to facilitating the redevelopment of Galway Harbour,” he said, “because access is going to be a major consideration in deciding whether planning is granted in respect of that project


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    "Bother na dTreabh" is the DC/part of the S4 section (N18 to N84) of the existing route only, IWH. Its about half of the entire ring road, nothing more.

    The NRA and indeed everyone except you it appears recognise the rest (N84 to R336) is unsalvagable. This includes the Corrib crossing which is the entire need for the outer bypass!

    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    N84 to R336? Sorry, I find that a bit confusing. According to the Google map I'm looking at, the N84 is the Headford Road and the R336, in the relevant part of the city, is called the Tuam Road locally (closer to town, well before it becomes the N17).


    MYOB wrote: »
    The R336 at the locaiton I'm referring to is the road to Connemara. If you know the 'ring road' you'll know exactly what I mean. More insight that you don't actually know Galway at all.

    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    1. Link to the R336 location on Google Maps please.

    MYOB wrote: »




    This is getting surreal! :D

    Having claimed "insight" into my alleged lack of knowledge of Galway City, having made the clearly inaccurate statement that "the road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge", and having attempted to wriggle out of that last gaffe by claiming that since it takes as much as "fifteen minutes drive in rush hour" it is therefore "nowhere near in terms of traffic" (hilarious!) you now appear to be saying, as your last link above suggests, that the rather ancient and venerable Salthill Road up past the diving tower at Blackrock is somehow part of a "ring road" deemed "unsalvageable" by the NRA?! I don't geddit... :confused:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    This is getting surreal! :D

    Having claimed "insight" into my alleged lack of knowledge of Galway City, having made the clearly inaccurate statement that "the road named Bothar na dTreabh gets nowhere near the Quincentennial Bridge", and having attempted to wriggle out of that last gaffe by claiming that since it takes as much as "fifteen minutes drive in rush hour" it is therefore "nowhere near in terms of traffic" (hilarious!) you now appear to be saying, as your last link above suggests, that the rather ancient and venerable Salthill Road up past the diving tower at Blackrock is somehow part of a "ring road" deemed "unsalvageable" by the NRA?! I don't geddit... :confused:


    No, I'm saying that the "ring road" ends AT the R336 not that the R336 was any part of it. Which you'd know if you were doing something other than relying on maps, which its clear you are from thinking I was referring to the Tuam Road...

    The GCOB as planned will also end at the R336, again, you'd know this if you knew what it was you were arguing against.

    And that for a driver, when you're at the end of Bothar na dTreabh, you're a massive driving time from the Quin bridge. Seeing as Galway is quite small, this is a perfectly valid definition of "nowhere near"

    Getting desperate now are you IWH?


  • Registered Users Posts: 263 ✭✭citycentre


    Iwannahurl, I'd suggest you stop digging as you are showing up how little you know about the road network in Galway. None of the points that you have quoted from MYOB need any explanation or are in any way inaccurate. Your glib, pedantic and nonsensical pointscoring shows clearly that you will cling to your own narrow agenda at the expense of any other opinion or viewpoint.

    Galway needs the outer bypass. It also needs a proper public transport system, a decent cycling network and increased pedestrianization of the city centre. There will be no modal shift to public transport or cycling until the road network allows these modes to actually work properly. The outer bypass is clearly -nay ridiculously - obviously part of the overall solution, not something that will add to the problems.

    No matter what the cycling evangelists say, the general populace will not be shifting en mass to their bikes. I say this as someone who doesn't even own a car, who cycles everywhere but also as someone in the architecture and planning field who is extremely familiar with the road layouts, demographics and transport "culture" we are dealing with.

    I honestly think that anyone arguing against the provision of the outer bypass is delusional. As a result I wasn't remotely surprised to hear that Cllr. C. Connolly was arguing strenuously against it at the recent council meeting about the recent traffic problems. Glad to hear that its provision is near top of the list in terms of priorities despite the pathetic, timewasting legalistic roadblocks that have been thrown up against it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    And you attack people for pedantry...

    The GCOB won't take *any* traffic out of the harbour area as it does not serve traffic going anywhere near it. This is blatantly clear to anyone who's actually been in Galway for more than a weekend.

    Bring in your beloved enforcement then. Its not even a fraction of a valid argument against the bypass.

    And if removing traffic would make the city streets more dangerous for cyclists why are you for, erm, removing traffic by means of public transport to make it more condusive to cyclists? Talking out of both sides of your mouth. Can't have it both ways.

    Will removing traffic make it safer or more dangerous? Pick a viewpoint and stop trying to represent both.



    1. Pedantry: context, dear boy, context. You have repeatedly engaged in ad hominem argument, attempting to suggest that I have no knowledge of Galway City and by implication that I do not have valid opinions on the GCOB. You then refer to the Quincentenary Bridge as the Quincentennial. Of course any person who really knows Galway would know that, so obviously you're blah blah etc.

    2. We appear to be talking at cross purposes regarding the purpose and likely effects of the GCOB. "The GCOB won't take *any* traffic out of the harbour area as it does not serve traffic going anywhere near it." You have made the point more than once before that its function is as a bypass pure and simple:
    MYOB wrote: »
    Those heading in to the city aren't going to get much benefit but the bulk of them who are heading to anywhere but the city are.

    Any traffic improvements for the city are nearly entirely unconnected to the bypass - and QBCs, cycle facilities etc are definitely part of the mix required for the city.

    The bypass is needed as a bypass. Not a relief road for the city, it already has that, except its expected to carry masses of traffic around the city.


    Are you arguing from a purely technical or engineering perspective here, rather than a political one?

    Fair enough, the proposed road may be needed and specced as a bypass, and there may be an excellent business case for why it will be of economic benefit to the West, but I assure you that locally it is being widely touted as something like a relief road!

    The good burghers of Knocknacarra are being promised that they will be able to reach Carnmore Airport in fifteen minutes, the One-Off Brigade want to drive from Boleybeg to Ballsbridge in two-and-a-half hours, the frustrated car commuters just want it so they can avoid bottlenecks like the Bodkin Roundabout, the GTU claim it's an essential element of a citywide transportation strategy, the developers and their TD/Councillor friends are insisting that it's needed to make the (traffic generating) Harbour/Ceannt Station redevelopment possible, and the speculators are (or were, and will be again) salivating about the prospects for rezonings along the route.

    What I have been trying to say all along is not that a bypass per se is an intrinsically bad idea. Rather, it is a major piece of infrastructure that has been identified as of strategic importance, but which may well be abused or simply function sub-optimally because of ... overuse, perhaps?

    It appears that you have a clear idea of what the GCOB is intended to do. My position is that there is a strong likelihood that it will be used for other purposes. I don't want the GCOB to become a means of filling up the city again with traffic-generating commercial and residential development. Neither do I want it to facilitate more sporadic and uncoordinated development in rural areas. I genuinely believe that the GCOB carries to the potential to do both. Local GCOB proponents agree with this view; it's just that they don't see it as a bad thing.

    3. The alleged benefits of GCOB-related traffic reduction. This is an example, IMO, of where the sales rhetoric of GCOB proponents may not match reality. Galwaycyclist already explained this perspective, based on years of experience and not on assumptions.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    No, I'm saying that the "ring road" ends AT the R336 not that the R336 was any part of it. Which you'd know if you were doing something other than relying on maps, which its clear you are from thinking I was referring to the Tuam Road...

    The GCOB as planned will also end at the R336, again, you'd know this if you knew what it was you were arguing against.

    And that for a driver, when you're at the end of Bothar na dTreabh, you're a massive driving time from the Quin bridge. Seeing as Galway is quite small, this is a perfectly valid definition of "nowhere near"

    Getting desperate now are you IWH?


    The proposed GCOB route ends much further out along the coast the R336. You posted a link to Upper Salthill. Why?

    Your "nowhere near" semantics are risible. It was clear that the discussion of the locations was geographic, until you suddenly switched to a time reference, post hoc.

    And no, I ain't getting desperate. Please refrain from these ad hominem arguments.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    1. Pedantry: context, dear boy, context. You have repeatedly engaged in ad hominem argument, attempting to suggest that I have no knowledge of Galway City and by implication that I do not have valid opinions on the GCOB. You then refer to the Quincentenary Bridge as the Quincentennial. Of course any person who really knows Galway would know that, so obviously you're blah blah etc.

    Using the more commonly used name locally shows a lack of local knowledge HOW exactly? Ridiculously poor attempt at points scoring, again.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Are you arguing from a purely technical or engineering perspective here, rather than a political one?

    Technical. The politician is the one claiming it for a political purpose, clearly, and he is the one you've quoted more than once to try and defend your position...
    Iwannahurl wrote: »

    Fair enough, the proposed road may be needed and specced as a bypass, and there may be an excellent business case for why it will be of economic benefit to the West, but I assure you that locally it is being widely touted as something like a relief road!

    Political, again. The main touter was let go by those he was touting to which suggests that the people aren't that stupid and actually know what its purpose is.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    and their TD/Councillor friends are insisting that it's needed to make the (traffic generating) Harbour/Ceannt Station redevelopment possible, and the speculators are (or were, and will be again) salivating about the prospects for rezonings along the route.

    Councils live on development levys (and motor tax). When we have property taxation this can be fixed, hopefully, once and for all
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    What I have been trying to say all along is not that a bypass per se is an intrinsically bad idea. Rather, it is a major piece of infrastructure that has been identified as of strategic importance, but which may well be abused or simply function sub-optimally because of ... overuse, perhaps?

    You do know what the capacity of a motorway grade dual carriageway is, right? Overuse is not something for the next 40 years.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    I don't want the GCOB to become a means of filling up the city again with traffic-generating commercial and residential development. Neither do I want it to facilitate more sporadic and uncoordinated development in rural areas. I genuinely believe that the GCOB carries to the potential to do both. Local GCOB proponents agree with this view; it's just that they don't see it as a bad thing.

    Address that through the planning system then, rather than delaying a bypass which is costing the economy millions and indeed costing lives (there have been numerous deaths on the Quincen[ ] bridge over the years)
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    3. The alleged benefits of GCOB-related traffic reduction. This is an example, IMO, of where the sales rhetoric of GCOB proponents may not match reality. Galwaycyclist already explained this perspective, based on years of experience and not on assumptions.

    That is someone else who is talking out of both sides of their mouth.

    You cannot be for potentially reducing traffic by means of modal shift and yet against potentially reducing traffic by means of a bypass without being a complete and utter hypocrite. You didn't address this I see.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    The proposed GCOB route ends much further out along the coast the R336. You posted a link to Upper Salthill. Why?

    Because, if you follow the road on the map, you'll see that that is the end of the route of the existing "Ring road". You wanted to see where on the R336 the ring road ended and now you're going off on a tangent when shown it.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Your "nowhere near" semantics are risible. It was clear that the discussion of the locations was geographic, until you suddenly switched to a time reference, post hoc.

    There was nothing to indicate, suggest or require that the discussion refer to geographic particularly as we were talking about traffic at the time. Traffic conditions do not depend on crow flies distances like you appear to be doing.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    And no, I ain't getting desperate. Please refrain from these ad hominem arguments.

    Clearly you are.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    citycentre wrote: »
    Iwannahurl, I'd suggest you stop digging as you are showing up how little you know about the road network in Galway. None of the points that you have quoted from MYOB need any explanation or are in any way inaccurate. Your glib, pedantic and nonsensical pointscoring shows clearly that you will cling to your own narrow agenda at the expense of any other opinion or viewpoint.

    Galway needs the outer bypass. It also needs a proper public transport system, a decent cycling network and increased pedestrianization of the city centre. There will be no modal shift to public transport or cycling until the road network allows these modes to actually work properly. The outer bypass is clearly -nay ridiculously - obviously part of the overall solution, not something that will add to the problems.

    No matter what the cycling evangelists say, the general populace will not be shifting en mass to their bikes. I say this as someone who doesn't even own a car, who cycles everywhere but also as someone in the architecture and planning field who is extremely familiar with the road layouts, demographics and transport "culture" we are dealing with.

    I honestly think that anyone arguing against the provision of the outer bypass is delusional. As a result I wasn't remotely surprised to hear that Cllr. C. Connolly was arguing strenuously against it at the recent council meeting about the recent traffic problems. Glad to hear that its provision is near top of the list in terms of priorities despite the pathetic, timewasting legalistic roadblocks that have been thrown up against it.


    Can you explain MYOB's link to Upper Salthill?

    My own "narrow agenda"? Do tell.

    There is no delusion in the following observations: (a) the GCOB is years away; (b) there are severe traffic congestion problems in the city that need fixing now; (c) there is a plan waiting in the wings that could be implemented sooner and at a fraction of the cost; (d) that plan, which would have to implemented properly of course, does not preclude a bypass at a later date.

    So you're all for the GCOB. Yippee, three cheers, slap on the back, take a bow. Now what? Rest on your smug laurels for the next, what, five years or more?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    Clearly you are.


    Yes, dear. If you say so it must be true.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Can you explain MYOB's link to Upper Salthill?

    Are you still unwilling to scroll up the map, oh, three inches to see that that is where the ring road meets the R336?

    As I already said, most traffic for the R336 'cuts the corner' (as the road layout has the R336 turning 90 degrees through traffic lights) via the Kingston Road, as you'd expect, but seeing as the link was in response to you not having the vaguest idea what was meant by 'the section of the ring road from the N84 to the R336' I provided you with, amazingly enough, where the ring road meets the R336...

    And you're trying to use it as some attempt to claim you actually know Galway now. The irony. Of course, going on form, you'll ignore this explanation again and refer back to it at least twice more in a poor attempt to discredit me

    Are you going to deal with the "traffic reductions will help cycling / traffic reductions will endanger cycling" hypocrisy you've done on this thread now?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    Technical. The politician is the one claiming it for a political purpose, clearly, and he is the one you've quoted more than once to try and defend your position...

    Political, again. The main touter was let go by those he was touting to which suggests that the people aren't that stupid and actually know what its purpose is.

    Councils live on development levys (and motor tax). When we have property taxation this can be fixed, hopefully, once and for all

    You do know what the capacity of a motorway grade dual carriageway is, right? Overuse is not something for the next 40 years.

    Address that through the planning system then, rather than delaying a bypass which is costing the economy millions and indeed costing lives (there have been numerous deaths on the Quincen[ ] bridge over the years)

    That is someone else who is talking out of both sides of their mouth.

    You cannot be for potentially reducing traffic by means of modal shift and yet against potentially reducing traffic by means of a bypass without being a complete and utter hypocrite. You didn't address this I see.


    The FG politician in question is not making those claims for mere political gain. The developers of the Harbour (and probably Ceannt Station) believe that they will not get approval unless access issues are sorted first, and they see the GCOB as essential to this. Therefore, logically, an influential group of people in the city seemingly expect the GCOB to take traffic out first before they can bring some more back again. That may not fit with the original rationale for the GCOB, but that is what some people are hoping for. I merely feared that was the case, but Brian Walsh TD confirmed it today.

    Frank Fahey was shamelessly using the GCOB to whip up populist support, easy to do among Galway car drivers these days. He was dumped because of a massive swing against FF, not because voters read the GCOB brochure a bit more carefully. In any case, they voted in new TD Brian Walsh, another GCOB salesman.

    Agreed: fiscal policy, decent planning legislation and responsible local government would tackle problems such as unsustainable rural development. However, this is Ireland so some pessimism in this regard is not unjustified. We have lots of shiny new motorways, but our political culture is still plodding along in the boreens (or stuck on a roundabout).

    When I am talking about overuse or misuse of the potential GCOB, I am referring mainly to knock-on traffic-related effects in its vicinity and in the city. You argue that it is pure bypass, whereas I am of the view that it will be a ring/relief road for many. Forty years? The previous "ring road" (to use the NRA's term) was DC at least in parts, was it not? It was in trouble within ten years.

    MYOB wrote: »

    Are you going to deal with the "traffic reductions will help cycling / traffic reductions will endanger cycling" hypocrisy you've done on this thread now?



    "You cannot be for potentially reducing traffic by means of modal shift and yet against potentially reducing traffic by means of a bypass without being a complete and utter hypocrite. You didn't address this I see."

    Oh dear. Reducing "traffic" by modal shift and reducing "traffic" with a bypass are not the same thing. That's not hypocrisy, it's logic.

    Bicycles are traffic. Walking is a mode of transport. Every motorist switching to cycling or walking is one less car. If motorised traffic, especially car traffic, was reduced by modal shift to cycling and walking, then the net effect would more bicycle and pedestrian traffic. More cycling and walking equals safer cycling and walking.

    On the other hand, if motorised traffic were reduced by means of a bypass, but if there was no modal shift for any reason but especially if the City Council failed to implement pro-cycling and pro-walking measures, then the result could well be continued real and perceived danger for cyclists and pedestrians. Free speeds could well be higher on average because of the less congested roads, and if cyclists and pedestrians still had to contend with roundabouts, substandard facilities, substandard lane widths, dangerous overtaking, lack of HGV management, lack of speed management etc then they may be no better off or maybe even worse off.

    Again, that is not an argument against the pure business case for a pure bypass. It is a healthy and realistic dose of scepticism, based on experience, regarding the possible true intentions of the GCOB salesmen.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    Are you still unwilling to scroll up the map, oh, three inches to see that that is where the ring road meets the R336?

    As I already said, most traffic for the R336 'cuts the corner' (as the road layout has the R336 turning 90 degrees through traffic lights) via the Kingston Road, as you'd expect, but seeing as the link was in response to you not having the vaguest idea what was meant by 'the section of the ring road from the N84 to the R336' I provided you with, amazingly enough, where the ring road meets the R336...

    And you're trying to use it as some attempt to claim you actually know Galway now. The irony. Of course, going on form, you'll ignore this explanation again and refer back to it at least twice more in a poor attempt to discredit me


    I know Galway very well. Well enough not to routinely refer to the city's roads by their N or R designations (like the way some people say Quincentennial).

    But at this hour of the night I no longer have any idea what you're on about or why it even matters any more.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    When I am talking about overuse or misuse of the potential GCOB, I am referring mainly to knock-on traffic-related effects in its vicinity and in the city. You argue that it is pure bypass, whereas I am of the view that it will be a ring/relief road for many. Forty years? The previous "ring road" (to use the NRA's term) was DC at least in parts, was it not? It was in trouble within ten years.

    A DC with roundabouts has a capacity of a fraction of that of a motorway.

    It was in trouble before it was finished as it was undercapacity from day one. The plans for the GCOB were announced within years of the only even vaguely close to suitable version being finished at that; and the worst bits are S2 and S4, not DC.

    Again, if you knew Galway...

    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Oh dear. Reducing "traffic" by modal shift and reducing "traffic" with a bypass are not the same thing. That's not hypocrisy, it's logic.

    Bicycles are traffic. Walking is a mode of transport. Every motorist switching to cycling or walking is one less car. If motorised traffic, especially car traffic, was reduced by modal shift to cycling and walking, then the net effect would more bicycle and pedestrian traffic. More cycling and walking equals safer cycling and walking.

    On the other hand, if motorised traffic were reduced by means of a bypass, but if there was no modal shift for any reason but especially if the City Council failed to implement pro-cycling and pro-walking measures, then the result could well be continued real and perceived danger for cyclists and pedestrians. Free speeds could well be higher on average because of the less congested roads, and if cyclists and pedestrians still had to contend with roundabouts, substandard facilities, substandard lane widths, dangerous overtaking, lack of HGV management, lack of speed management etc then they may be no better off or maybe even worse off.

    Both will be removing motorised traffic from the city centre according to you, yet you still claim one is good and the other is dangerous. You can't talk your way out of having contradicted yourself completely and utterly; and you avoided even trying to until challenged again and again.

    More cyclists and pedestrians won't lower free speeds for the same amount of traffic.
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Again, that is not an argument against the pure business case for a pure bypass. It is a healthy and realistic dose of scepticism, based on experience, regarding the possible true intentions of the GCOB salesmen.

    What you call 'scepticism', I call opposition based on a worry that it'll increase car usage, due to the fact that you are anti-car and nothing else, despite wrapping it up as being pro "road safety" and pro cycling.

    You oppose anything which could possibly benefit car traffic on whatever grounds you can think up at the time. Anyone can look over your posting history to see this clear as day.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 69,536 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    I know Galway very well. Well enough not to routinely refer to the city's roads by their N or R designations (like the way some people say Quincentennial).

    Yet not enough to not realise Google Maps has the road names wrong....
    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    But at this hour of the night I no longer have any idea what you're on about or why it even matters any more.

    You finally scrolled up the map?


  • Registered Users Posts: 263 ✭✭citycentre


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    So you're all for the GCOB. Yippee, three cheers, slap on the back, take a bow. Now what? Rest on your smug laurels for the next, what, five years or more?

    More childish, inane nonsense. And you are calling me smug? Wow... The delusion doesn't end with the Outer bypass debate.

    The reality is that none of the wonderful, idealistic strategies you espouse have a hope in hell of working until the bypass is built. That is why it's still top of the priority list for infrastructure projects nationwide and why, as soon as the legal hurdles are cleared, it's construction will be commenced immediately. All of your irrelevant chitchat about rezoning, one off housing, distributors etc. fails to mask a clear and tiresome anti-road, anti-car bias.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 25,234 ✭✭✭✭Sponge Bob


    James Nix is a blithering idiot ........also being far too closely aligned to those sociopathic greens in an taisce as well as being associated with the chief time and money waster Sweetman. A right axis of weasels he finds himself in company with. :(

    Nix refers to all classes of modern road as "motorways", most especially when they are not motorways and not designed as motorways. Arrant muppetry.

    I don't even bother reading the rest, it is simply an taisce/green cant. Find some other source willya.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    Sponge Bob wrote: »
    James Nix is a blithering idiot ........also being far too closely aligned to those sociopathic greens in an taisce as well as being associated with the chief time and money waster Sweetman. A right axis of weasels he finds himself in company with. :(

    Nix refers to all classes of modern road as "motorways", most especially when they are not motorways and not designed as motorways. Arrant muppetry.

    I don't even bother reading the rest, it is simply an taisce/green cant. Find some other source willya.



    citycentre wrote: »
    More childish, inane nonsense.







    .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    citycentre wrote: »
    More childish, inane nonsense. And you are calling me smug? Wow... The delusion doesn't end with the Outer bypass debate.

    The reality is that none of the wonderful, idealistic strategies you espouse have a hope in hell of working until the bypass is built. That is why it's still top of the priority list for infrastructure projects nationwide and why, as soon as the legal hurdles are cleared, it's construction will be commenced immediately. All of your irrelevant chitchat about rezoning, one off housing, distributors etc. fails to mask a clear and tiresome anti-road, anti-car bias.




    Being "right" about the GCOB doesn't help the current situation one bit.

    The bypass is years away, and you know it.

    It seems we are to infer that you, unlike GCOB sceptics, are pragmatic and rational about these things.

    So, please educate us idealistic and deluded ones: what do we do in the meantime?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 25,234 ✭✭✭✭Sponge Bob


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    So, please educate us idealistic and deluded ones: what do we do in the meantime?

    Wear a high vis and a flashing light.!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,002 ✭✭✭what_traffic


    What will the toll rates be - if its built? Heard Brian Walsh TD say on Keith Finnegans show (from the FG think-in at the Radission) last Tuesday say it will be a tolled road if its built.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    MYOB wrote: »
    Both will be removing motorised traffic from the city centre according to you, yet you still claim one is good and the other is dangerous. You can't talk your way out of having contradicted yourself completely and utterly; and you avoided even trying to until challenged again and again.

    More cyclists and pedestrians won't lower free speeds for the same amount of traffic.

    What you call 'scepticism', I call opposition based on a worry that it'll increase car usage, due to the fact that you are anti-car and nothing else, despite wrapping it up as being pro "road safety" and pro cycling.

    You oppose anything which could possibly benefit car traffic on whatever grounds you can think up at the time. Anyone can look over your posting history to see this clear as day.



    It seems you are determined to tell me what I am, know and think regardless of what I say or regardless of what evidence I present to support the key points I make. Anyway, I have little interest or time to pursue the ad hominem approach you seem to favour, so I'll leave you to it.

    By the way, can you indicate whether you are an civil/roads engineer or some such? You seem to focus on these aspects of the GCOB (eg emphasising its design function as a bypass) whereas I am more concerned about local outcomes, local politics and local policies as well as broader issues such as orderly spatial planning and sustainability.

    It is clear to me, and to high profile advocates of the bypass, that a key objective of the GCOB is to pave the way for massive new development in the city centre. Correct me if I am wrong, but you have either denied that is the case, dismissed it as irrelevant or ignored it because the bypass is "needed as a bypass", and "any traffic improvements for the city are nearly entirely unconnected to the bypass".

    Brian Walsh TD, a former board member of the Harbour Board (and possible current director of the Harbour Company -- I am still trying to confirm that) has stated categorically that the GCOB is needed to make the ambitious harbour development plan possible.

    The Galway Port Development Plan, which is due to go on public display later this month, states that current restrictions on port size are hampering the core business of the port and also preventing enhancement and growth for generating entirely new business.

    New business envisaged for the port includes a 250-berth marina and a significant number of visits from cruise vessels. They cite the examples of Dublin (80 cruise liners, 120000 passengers and crew) and Cork (40 cruise vessels, 45000 visitors). The expanded facilities would also allow the holding of major national and international events, such as the highly successful (and enjoyable) Volvo Ocean Race stopover, which attracted a total of 650,000 visitors to the city.

    In the absence of a "master plan" for this area of Galway City, which would have to address traffic and transportation issues, it is conceivable that the Port Development Plan and the Ceannt Station Redevelopment could proceed independently of each other. This is what Noel Grealish TD had to say last year about that possibility:
    “The impression I got from CIÉ at the meeting was they want to go alone rather than with the Harbour Board. There’s nothing to stop them going alone but I don’t accept that they should. These two projects will have major implications for the whole city but particularly for transport, access in and out of the city and traffic."
    Emphasis added by me.

    MYOB, my impression is that you have good technical/engineering knowledge of strategic infrastructure like the GCOB.

    Looking just at the above two plans (they being by far the largest infrastructural developments proposed for the city, apart from the proposed bypass itself) can you give your opinion regarding (a) what relevance the Galway City Outer Bypass has to such massive development proposals, and (b) the likely traffic generation effects of the major developments.

    ******

    With regard to traffic reduction effects, cycle safety etc, it is self-evident that reducing motorised traffic through significant modal shift and extensive pro cycling/walking measures is not the same as reducing motorised traffic by constructing a bypass and then leaving the same number of cyclists/pedestrians to fend for themselves in an otherwise unchanged urban environment, especially with more traffic-generating development being proposed. If you believe otherwise, then so be it.

    ******

    "You are anti-car and nothing else". Please don't say that to Betsy. She's sitting in the driveway outside and is very sensitive.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    What will the toll rates be - if its built? Heard Brian Walsh TD say on Keith Finnegans show (from the FG think-in at the Radission) last Tuesday say it will be a tolled road if its built.


    Tolls on a bypass? Dodgy.

    @what_traffic: you seem to be knowledgeable about cycling matters. can you comment on the dispute between MYOB and me on this point:

    "You cannot be for potentially reducing traffic by means of modal shift and yet against potentially reducing traffic by means of a bypass without being a complete and utter hypocrite. You didn't address this I see."

    If you follow the argument through the relevant post you will see that I do not regard the two scenarios as equivalent. According to MYOB this means I am just a hypocrite.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    Sponge Bob wrote: »
    Wear a high vis and a flashing light.!




    Engineering degree?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 25,234 ✭✭✭✭Sponge Bob


    Iwannahurl wrote: »
    Engineering degree?

    No , it is called visibility. If I splatter a cyclist that I simply did not see my conscience is clear. Does one need a degree to acquire common sense nowadays.

    Build the bypass and see what we can do with the alt.greeny sh1te after the bypass is buiilt. There should be road space for buses and trams and bicycles then. For now there ain't in Galway. Way it is.

    tinkering with a zero sum game is a zero sum game, look up "zero sum game" before you decide you need an engineering degree!!!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,156 ✭✭✭Iwannahurl


    Sponge Bob wrote: »
    No , it is called visibility. If I splatter a cyclist that I simply did not see my conscience is clear. Does one need a degree to acquire common sense nowadays.

    Build the bypass and see what we can do with the alt.greeny sh1te after the bypass is buiilt. There should be road space for buses and trams and bicycles then. For now there ain't in Galway. Way it is.

    tinkering with a zero sum game is a zero sum game, look up "zero sum game" before you decide you need an engineering degree!!!




    Way it is in Galway is that many motorists who participate in the traffic chaos every day won't stop whining about way it is.

    Way it is guess traffic must just be other people.


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