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Failte Ireland report on the Mayo Greenway

2

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,843 ✭✭✭Zippe


    I was just looking and came across this thread, I can't see why anyone would take so much time to talk about the green way if it's so crap,I use this for cycling with my kids as that's what it's for,it's safe no speeding cars(maybe someone trying to speed on a bike :-} ) but on a normal day its safe,if you are a race rider it don't say much if you picked this green way to go speeding/racing on,it will not suit the road Tyres as much as a mtb or atb,that said I have cycled it on my road bike few times,but more suited to a mtb or hybrid or atb style bike's,this green way comes through our land and just to let you know no one got paid for the land,we gave it up free for people to use 364 day a year,I think we do have the right to close it for 1 day per year to keep our right's to the land,I don't think there is too many people out there that will hold that against us as land owners,the bit of green way that was missing on the way into Newport will be in place over next few from what is been said weeks as the new road held that bit up,it is great for the town's around it as it brings people to the area to try it out,there is a big up take in cycling by older people that has not cycled for years and now they have a chance to cycle in a safe place again,also there is a big amount of people that come from bigger towns,city's to cycle and not have to worry about cars and get a chance to see the country side,if they do stop to open a gate they will get a chance to see more,like all things it's not for everyone but the green way is for most,this is great for cycling,running and walking and it's free,and everyone is WELCOME to use it even the hight speed wheelers,

    Enjoy the west zip,


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    The posters who are complaining are doing so because they care about cycling and somd also care about the development of cycling in this country.

    If the council and everybody else involved really want world-class cycle routes in Mayo, then they would take the constructive criticism on board and try fix what people think are problems.

    That's only if everybody involved wants to get the max possable out of the route. To put it another way: Are you looking to do quality which will attract the most amount of tourists and leasure users? Then take the feedback on board.

    If every involved is fine with the way it and does not care about feedback, then please try not to oversell it as world class if it is not world class -- some people will just feel cheated.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,779 ✭✭✭✭kippy


    monument wrote: »
    The posters who are complaining are doing so because they care about cycling and somd also care about the development of cycling in this country.

    If the council and everybody else involved really want world-class cycle routes in Mayo, then they would take the constructive criticism on board and try fix what people think are problems.

    That's only if everybody involved wants to get the max possable out of the route. To put it another way: Are you looking to do quality which will attract the most amount of tourists and leasure users? Then take the feedback on board.

    If every involved is fine with the way it and does not care about feedback, then please try not to oversell it as world class if it is not world class -- some people will just feel cheated.
    The thing is, you have got to start somewhere.

    Ultimately this project got off the ground for a few reasons.
    1. A relatively cheap "foundation" already there - the railway hadnt been used in years and was ideal for this type of thing.
    2. The co-operation of a large number of bodies.
    3. The realisation that to get this done on budget, on time and ensure it meets the requirements of the MAJORITY of those who will be using it as well as the requirements of local landowners/farmers etc, would mean making a few "adjustments".

    This isn't Holland, or Denmark or any other European country. It is Ireland. Indeed it is the West of Ireland. How would you have proposed getting an almost 100% safe, dedicated cycle path from Westport to Achill completed in the same timescale and budget, taking into account the same local needs as well as what you expect from such a piece of infrastructure?

    This is designed for the family, the couple, who want to take a "LEISURELY" cycle while taking in some fantastic views. They might rent a bike, they may stop in numerous locations along they way.

    There is scope to "improve" this route, indeed improvements are taking place along sections of it at the moment (and into the future) but you got to start somewhere.

    This feasibility report (I havent read it, basing opinion on what you have said) has shown that there is a "market" for this exact type of amenity, in the state it is in however poorly some may think it is. Even the reaction of people on this thread of people saying they have done it and plan doing it again show it is fit for purpose.

    The road is there for anyone/everyone who cannot or does not want to use the cyclepath.

    We have massive potential all across the country for this type of thing and indeed some lessons can be learned from this but this is a great facility for the area and one which has many positive connotations for years to come.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    kippy wrote:
    This isn't Holland, or Denmark or any other European country. It is Ireland. Indeed it is the West of Ireland. How would you have proposed getting an almost 100% safe, dedicated cycle path from Westport to Achill completed in the same timescale and budget, taking into account the same local needs as well as what you expect from such a piece of infrastructure?

    To be fair, this is what the OP was complaining about originally - why do we have to preface our defence of the cycle path with stating that this is Ireland, not a country where they have better facilities, so we should just be happy with what we get. It's a particularly Irish attitude to respond to mediocrity with a fatalistic sort of "Sure this is Ireland, aren't we doing well to have anything"

    Nobody (bar the OP who later recanted) is saying that the cycle path is crap - I think it's fantastic to see this sort of facility, and I completely agree that without the compromises mentioned then it may not have been built at all. If I can paraphrase Eamon Dunphy, it's a good cycle path, but not a great cycle path.

    I would hope though that lessons can be learned from this project and applied to similar cycle paths around the country. Off the top of my head, there are 2 disused railways leaving Waterford City - to Dungarvan and to New Ross, plus the Wellington Bridge/Rosslare line and if the approach used in Mayo was applied to these, then we could begin to construct a serious cycling infrastructure in this country.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    To be fair, this is what the OP was complaining about originally - why do we have to preface our defence of the cycle path with stating that this is Ireland, not a country where they have better facilities, so we should just be happy with what we get. It's a particularly Irish attitude to respond to mediocrity with a fatalistic sort of "Sure this is Ireland, aren't we doing well to have anything"

    I don't think the problem is fatalism. My interpretation is that in post-colonial Ireland some people see themselves as the rightful inheritors of the power stuctures behind "the big house". For that to " work" other people are supposed to take on the role of the grovelling peasants - grateful for any condenscending titbits cast from the masters table.

    The peasants aren't supposed to question the actions of their betters. This might best explain the demonstrable and wholly unreasonable "rage" that some people react with when the peasants start asking reasonable questions and making reasonable comparisons with practice elsewhere.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    kippy wrote: »
    Even the reaction of people on this thread of people saying they have done it and plan doing it again show it is fit for purpose.

    The road is there for anyone/everyone who cannot or does not want to use the cyclepath.

    A good post apart from the above, which reads like "we did our best, some people like, if you don't like if you can f**k off back down the road from whence you came". Not exactly how to sell a nascent tourist facility when faced with constructive criticism, now is it?

    This is a good amenity that suffers from some very poor design decisions, and needs be refined to become a great amenity. I'm at a loss to understand why any of the gate / narrow cattle grid combos are required on the route. Surely, you simply fence off the fields and put the gates into those fences. Seems to work well enough for the roads, and would have been cheaper to build. Riding the route gives the impression that some local construction firm was making a swift buck installing a rake of unnecessary cattle grid / gate combos.

    As the first tourist amenity of this kind in the country, the green way needs to be great rather than just good in order to generate the required demand for the model is to be repeated elsewhere. For any of you that haven't cycled it for a family break, I'd urge you to give it a go to help this happen.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    smacl wrote: »
    I'm at a loss to understand why any of the gate / narrow cattle grid combos are required on the route. Surely, you simply fence off the fields and put the gates into those fences.

    Because the thing was constructed with the agreement of local landowners. Much of it is built on their land.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,606 ✭✭✭schemingbohemia


    Firstly, I haven't used this facility so can't comment on the specifics of it.

    Secondly, whilst people are bemoaning the "sure it's Ireland, we don't do anything world-class" the facts are that our Constitution provides an insane level of protection for private property which makes the solution used here the most sensible one to use - that is getting agreement and allowing cattle grids/kissing gates to remain in situ.

    It's funny though that the same protections weren't given to the original owners of the railway (or the State it's inheritor) so that over the years local farmers/people were able to encroach on the land to use for their own purposes and now ignore those same rules to claim their own rights by closing the land 1 day of the year.

    France and the Netherlands allow for a much greater consideration of the common good rather than personal greed. Some Republic we are? So change the Constitution and then we will be able to provide infrastructure for the common good. In the meantime this is the best solution possible.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    It's funny though that the same protections weren't given to the original owners of the railway (or the State it's inheritor) so that over the years local farmers/people were able to encroach on the land to use for their own purposes and now ignore those same rules to claim their own rights by closing the land 1 day of the year.

    What are you talking about? The land was sold to local people by CIE after the railway closed in 1937


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,779 ✭✭✭✭kippy


    To be fair, this is what the OP was complaining about originally - why do we have to preface our defence of the cycle path with stating that this is Ireland, not a country where they have better facilities, so we should just be happy with what we get. It's a particularly Irish attitude to respond to mediocrity with a fatalistic sort of "Sure this is Ireland, aren't we doing well to have anything"

    Nobody (bar the OP who later recanted) is saying that the cycle path is crap - I think it's fantastic to see this sort of facility, and I completely agree that without the compromises mentioned then it may not have been built at all. If I can paraphrase Eamon Dunphy, it's a good cycle path, but not a great cycle path.

    I would hope though that lessons can be learned from this project and applied to similar cycle paths around the country. Off the top of my head, there are 2 disused railways leaving Waterford City - to Dungarvan and to New Ross, plus the Wellington Bridge/Rosslare line and if the approach used in Mayo was applied to these, then we could begin to construct a serious cycling infrastructure in this country.
    You've (and indeed a few more , from reading the replies since) have completely missed my point.
    Ireland, and the West of Ireland in particular, are nothing like Holland, Denmark (thankfully so for a number of factors) or any other country, both in terms of landscape, people and tradition - hence comparing amenities there with here and indeed the means in which they are implemented not the most intelligent thing to do.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,779 ✭✭✭✭kippy


    smacl wrote: »
    A good post apart from the above, which reads like "we did our best, some people like, if you don't like if you can f**k off back down the road from whence you came". Not exactly how to sell a nascent tourist facility when faced with constructive criticism, now is it?

    This is a good amenity that suffers from some very poor design decisions, and needs be refined to become a great amenity. I'm at a loss to understand why any of the gate / narrow cattle grid combos are required on the route. Surely, you simply fence off the fields and put the gates into those fences. Seems to work well enough for the roads, and would have been cheaper to build. Riding the route gives the impression that some local construction firm was making a swift buck installing a rake of unnecessary cattle grid / gate combos.

    As the first tourist amenity of this kind in the country, the green way needs to be great rather than just good in order to generate the required demand for the model is to be repeated elsewhere. For any of you that haven't cycled it for a family break, I'd urge you to give it a go to help this happen.
    No, you can read it like that however my slant is ,if it doesnt suit you, you have a secondary option. Two options.
    Look constructive critisicm is fine, however one needs to be aware of the context of this project and the barriers which had to be crossed to get it up and running. Ideally the path would be made of hard tarmac, 4 lanes (bikes, walkers, either direction) plenty space, no cattle grids, gates, road crossings, plenty stopping points, and the sun shining all the time.
    I am sure lessons will be learned but sometimes it's not possible to implement all the ideals.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    Nobody (bar the OP who later recanted) is saying that the cycle path is crap - I think it's fantastic to see this sort of facility, and I completely agree that without the compromises mentioned then it may not have been built at all. If I can paraphrase Eamon Dunphy, it's a good cycle path, but not a great cycle path.

    It's no doubt because this thread is in the cycling forum that this type of comment is so prevalent, but it rather misses the point.

    The Great Western Greenway is not a cycle path - it's a walking/running/hiking/cycle path. I live very close to the Westport end of the Greenway and am literally out walking on it every day of the week. From my own personal experience, cyclists are in the minority of users - at a guess, about 25%. Yesterday in the space of 20 minutes I passed about six walkers, twenty joggers and no cyclists.

    So far as the cattle grids are concerned, the ones around where I live at any rate are arranged beside gates on either side of a crossing between fields, allowing farmers to herd animals across without having to worry about them taking off at a gallop up the path - which surely makes the path safer for cyclists too! While this is going on, other path users can continue their journey via the cattle grids. When animals are not crossing (which in my experience is almost always) the gates are open and you don't have to cross the grids.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Because the thing was constructed with the agreement of local landowners. Much of it is built on their land.

    The narrow cattle grid / gate combos still make no sense. Why not just put in full width cattle grids across path that don't impede the cyclist and cause a particular hazard to those with wider and or longer bikes, as is the case with anyone towing a child. I'm guessing it's a compromise to allow the local farmer to drive livestock around the route by opening the gate as required, which is fine it being there land. If this was the requirement however, ordinary gates beside regular cattle grids would seem like the sensible engineering solution.

    If the greenway sees a busy summer season, I'm guessing forcing any amount of two way cycle traffic through these narrow cattle grids is going to result in a lot of frustration, with a high potential for accidents.

    This aspect has nothing to do with budget or meeting local requirements. It is simply poor design, easily enough fixed. No more no less.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    kippy wrote: »
    You've (and indeed a few more , from reading the replies since) have completely missed my point.
    Ireland, and the West of Ireland in particular, are nothing like Holland, Denmark (thankfully so for a number of factors) or any other country, both in terms of landscape, people and tradition - hence comparing amenities there with here and indeed the means in which they are implemented not the most intelligent thing to do.

    I accept your point that there are major differences between the West of Ireland and other countries, but my point is that those differences should not preclude us from seeking the best facilities possible. There are a lot of people here who have experienced similar facilities in other countries and I think it's reasonably intelligent to compare them to a certain extent. Part of the process of designing and implementing any community facilities like this should be a comprehensive review of other projects.

    There's no reason why we can't look at specific features that elevate other facilities above the Greenway and ask whether they were considered and why they haven't been implemented. A simple example would be a tarmac surface - this was probably considered and discarded due to the excessive cost - IMO the right decision, it's better to have the amenity in its current state than to not have it at all or to just have a few km of tarmac leading nowhere.


    gizmo555 wrote:
    The Great Western Greenway is not a cycle path - it's a walking/running/hiking/cycle path. I live very close to the Westport end of the Greenway and am literally out walking on it every day of the week. From my own personal experience, cyclists are in the minority of users - at a guess, about 25%. Yesterday in the space of 20 minutes I passed about six walkers, twenty joggers and no cyclists.

    Good point, and one I hadn't fully considered. The improvements mentioned here are indeed all to do with the cycling aspect of the route. I'd just like to point out though that implementing any of these would not affect the route as a footpath, but would have a considerable effect on in it as a cycle route.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    smacl wrote: »
    The narrow cattle grid / gate combos still make no sense. Why not just put in full width cattle grids across path that don't impede the cyclist and cause a particular hazard to those with wider and or longer bikes,

    But they would be a hazard to people on foot, who as I point out above, in my experience are the large majority of users of the Greenway.


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    gizmo555 wrote: »
    But they would be a hazard to people on foot, who as I point out above, in my experience are the large majority of users of the Greenway.

    Ok, you've lost me. Assuming the gates are closed, how are wider cattle grids more of an obstacle to walkers than narrow ones. If the gates are open, it doesn't make any difference.

    When I was down there last autumn, all the gates were closed, I didn't see any farmers, and the vast majority of users were cyclists. I'd guess there would be more walkers and joggers in the vicinity of Westport where you have a larger population with fewer immediate options of tracks, but far less around Newport, Mulranny, and Achill.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    smacl wrote: »
    Ok, you've lost me. Assuming the gates are closed, how are wider cattle grids more of an obstacle to walkers than narrow ones. If the gates are open, it doesn't make any difference

    Maybe I misread you, but I thought you were suggesting replacing the present setup with cattle grids across the full width of the path, which all users would have to cross at all times.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    gizmo555 wrote: »
    Maybe I misread you, but I thought you were suggesting replacing the present setup with cattle grids across the full width of the path, which all users would have to cross at all times.

    Nope.
    smacl wrote: »
    ordinary gates beside regular cattle grids would seem like the sensible engineering solution


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 865 ✭✭✭Stollaire


    Would most cycle from Westport to Achill, then stay in Keel that night for example, and cycle back to Westport the next day?

    Sounds like a nice idea for a summer weekend with herself.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    Stollaire wrote: »
    Would most cycle from Westport to Achill, then stay in Keel that night for example, and cycle back to Westport the next day?

    Sounds like a nice idea for a summer weekend with herself.

    The Greenway ends at Achill Sound, where the railway terminus was. Keel is another 14km on the ordinary roads. In Achill Sound, there's at least one hotel and I'm sure plenty of B&Bs.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,606 ✭✭✭schemingbohemia


    What are you talking about? The land was sold to local people by CIE after the railway closed in 1937

    Apologies!:o Sorry I really should have researched that bit before making my comment. I know in relation to other railway lines that the land wasn't sold by CIE and that locals just built onto it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    The Russians have a saying “the perfect is the enemy of the good enough”. The people in Mayo built a good enough cycleway within the constraints and the resources available. It is not a world class cycleway as claimed, but it is a very good pilot project that proves beyond all doubt that cycleways make economic sense. For achieving all this at a cost of only 3 million euro the people in Mayo have done this nation a great service.

    My original point was that if we accept the figures in the Failte Ireland report, the 3 million investment in the Greenway resulted in 7.2 million of extra spending in the local economy in 2011, this proves that building cycleways is a very good investment indeed. Our economy is in desperate trouble and contracting under the austerity regime. We desperately need some kind of economic stimulus. Cycleways fit the bill, they are relatively low cost, and we have the skills and resources needed to build them. They will create employment and generate economic activity.

    Why do we not take the example of Mayo and replicate it on a national scale and build a national cycleway network, but build it to a world class standard – two paved cycle lanes and a footpath and no gates or obstacles, like a road only for bikes and walkers. We can CPO land to build motorways, I don’t see why we can’t CPO land to build cycleways.

    A friend of mine told me a story about his brother who was cycling in the Loire Valley in France last summer. On a very hot day out in the countryside he ran out of water. He called to 5 doors and was refused water. It was at the 6th door he found someone to fill his water bottle. The French may have world class cycleways but many of the them are lacking the hospitality and charm of Irish people. I have no doubt just about any Irish person would be willing to refill a water bottle for a weary traveller.

    We can be very charming and hospitable to visitors, we have a great store of culture in our music, dance, arts etc. We have a beautiful island. We have a thriving artisan food and craft sector. We are easy to reach from continental western Europe and the UK. Put all this together and then throw in a world class national cycle and walking network and we could have a booming cycle and walking tourism industry. Plus a world class amenity for our own use.

    It seem to me this is a no brainer, we should start working on it today. Many posters here have outlined problems that need to be overcome to achieve this, but they are problems we need to overcome, not obstacles that have to stop us. There is no reason we cannot have a world class cycle network except our own willingness to settle for a mediocre one, a refusal to think big and a tendency to focus on problems rather than solutions.

    If we build it they will come.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,842 ✭✭✭Rob A. Bank


    With regard to the illusion of 'perfect' cycleways on the Continent...

    One of the popular routes is the Canal de Garonne/Canal du Midi, which connects the Atlantic to the Mediteranian, and had a cycleway along its toepath.

    This is the advice for anyone considering cycling its 433km length..

    "There are two ways you can cycle the Canal.

    1. Road bike, on the regional paved roads near the canal. This might take you away from the canal for a bit, and are more windy/less direct.

    2. Hybrid bike or slightly thicker tires on the unpaved, pebble/rock/tree-root strewn paths along the Canal. I recommend this route. It is much prettier and more interesting than the paved roads. Besides when you come to the locks you might have to carry the bike up and down a couple of steps (concrete)."

    So the Mayo Greenway is not so bad after all !

    ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,779 ✭✭✭✭kippy


    With regard to the illusion of 'perfect' cycleways on the Continent...

    One of the popular routes is the Canal de Garonne/Canal du Midi, which connects the Atlantic to the Mediteranian, and had a cycleway along its toepath.

    This is the advice for anyone considering cycling its 433km length..

    "There are two ways you can cycle the Canal.

    1. Road bike, on the regional paved roads near the canal. This might take you away from the canal for a bit, and are more windy/less direct.

    2. Hybrid bike or slightly thicker tires on the unpaved, pebble/rock/tree-root strewn paths along the Canal. I recommend this route. It is much prettier and more interesting than the paved roads. Besides when you come to the locks you might have to carry the bike up and down a couple of steps (concrete)."

    So the Mayo Greenway is not so bad after all !

    ;)

    Well, the grass is always greener elsewhere etc... ;)


  • Moderators, Home & Garden Moderators, Regional Midwest Moderators, Regional West Moderators Posts: 16,724 Mod ✭✭✭✭yop


    clonmahon wrote: »
    just about any Irish person would be willing to refill a water bottle for a weary traveller.

    Padraic Nally wouldn't! :eek:


    Good post the rest of it, not sure about their figures though, if they are right then as you said it really should be rolled out, EVEN if the paths are of the standard of those on Achill cycleway.

    I can't see how they can have continuous paths to be honest as you will need to cross into fields etc and they farmers will need to get their livestock from field to field.

    But again if them figures are correct its a no brainer. I know as a cyclist I would bring the family on that, no good to people who want to cycle on it for big cycle fitness but if it takes 1000's out of their houses and away from the TV, its a no brainer!!!

    Then again, if its a no brainer I am sure the gov won't do it! :rolleyes:


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    yop wrote: »
    I can't see how they can have continuous paths to be honest as you will need to cross into fields etc and they farmers will need to get their livestock from field to field.

    They seem to cracked this one already for roads, I'm sure a similar solution could be found for paths... :rolleyes:

    Sarcasm aside, there is a clear economic case for using a CPO to buy the land if you do the maths. Currently agricultural land has an average cost of €8,500 per acre, and I'm sure sheep farming land would be considerably less, but say we allow this as a rough figure. 1 acre is roughly 4,000 square meters, thus if we allow a 40 metre wide corridor for our cycle lane, it costs €85k per km to buy, or €3.6 million of land costs for the entire 43k greenway route. If you look at the total expenditure cost of the project, it already cost €5.5m of public money, the vast bulk of which came from transport and failte coffers. Given the facility is expected to generate €7.2m p/a, it makes clear economic sense to invest the remaining money to make it a publicly owned piece of rural transport infrastructure, and let the farmers traverse it with their flocks the same way they traverse any other piece of rural transport infrastructure.

    It's well and good to say the local people did this off their own bat, using their own lands, but the project still managed to consume €5.1m of central funds in the process. The €7.2m p/a returned will also be primarily to the local good, so you can't really say that Mayo is getting a raw deal whichever way you cut it.


  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,269 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    They could get NTR in to put a toll on it for 10 years until they raised the €3.6 million.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    They could get NTR in to put a toll on it for 10 years until they raised the €3.6 million.

    And then buy it back off them for five times as much?


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    yop wrote: »
    Padraic Nally wouldn't
    Very good, never thought of that when I wrote the post.
    yop wrote: »
    Good post the rest of it, not sure about their figures though, if they are right then as you said it really should be rolled out, EVEN if the paths are of the standard of those on Achill cycleway.

    Agreed, even if the figure are only half of what the report estimate we should still be rolling out Greenways.
    yop wrote: »
    But again if them figures are correct its a no brainer. I know as a cyclist I would bring the family on that, no good to people who want to cycle on it for big cycle fitness but if it takes 1000's out of their houses and away from the TV, its a no brainer!!!
    Absolutely apart from attracting tourists there are other benefits of cycleways. As you say in health and also in creating new cycle commuter zones around major towns, so saving on oil imports.
    yop wrote: »
    Then again, if its a no brainer I am sure the gov won't do it! :rolleyes:

    On this I am afraid we are agreed, it is not going to happen, we are going to throw all our money to those bloody bondholders and our economy is going to go on sinking. Although if it sinks far enough we may no longer be able to afford cars and then the roads will be our cycleways.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators, Regional South East Moderators Posts: 11,393 Mod ✭✭✭✭Captain Havoc


    Not the first time I've said this but here in Kilkenny we've two new motorways which have taken traffic off lovely wide hard-shouldered national roads. Irish people are fully aware that they are for pedestrians and cyclists but people still have a moan about no cycling facilities. If a few quid was spent on a few signs, painting a bicycle/ walker on the ground, a wee bit of rearranging at junctions/ roundabouts (OK, I know that'd be costly) and I think it'd create something very marketable to include in Fáilte Ireland ads/ brochures that show horsies/ golfers etc.... Print and charge a tenner for Green way guides as to maximize revenue.

    That's what it's like in Switzerland, you can cycle from Geneva to Zürich by following the signs. I cycled on 40km of what I suspect was converted railway in France, two way bicycle/ walking lane at every place where it met a road there were barriers that meant you had to slow down but not get off (there was a sign telling you to walk across), all very safe and with a super surface.

    https://ormondelanguagetours.com

    Walking Tours of Kilkenny in English, French or German.



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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    +1 on the idea of marketing the hard shoulders as a cycling resource and ensuring adequate surfacing etc.

    However there is a row going on between Cyclist.ie and the Minister for Commuter Transport at the moment. Its over his direction/promotion that some hard shoulders in his constituency be remarked as "cycle lanes".

    The beauty of hard shoulders is that they are effectively self cleaning since occasional use by motor traffic keeps them swept of grit and glass.

    Cycle lanes on the other hand act as collectors of gravel, grit and broken glass if you can't keep them swept you are making cycling conditions worse. Cycle lanes also carry false expectations of safety that hard shoulders don't. Hard shoulders also don't attract expectations of compulsory use for cyclists.

    Hard shoulders aren't perfect but for Irish conditions they are more perfect than other treatments.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,842 ✭✭✭Rob A. Bank


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LG0x6NTbA8Q

    For those who may not have experienced the Greenway...

    An extract from the RTE series 'Tracks & Trails' of garden designer Diarmuid Gavin, who cycled 18 km of the Great Western Greenway with his daughter.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    The bar is about to be raised on what constitutes a "world class cycleway". The swedes are planning a 20 km, 4 lane cycling superhighway linking Lund & Malmö. It will cost 50 million Swedish crowns (US$ 7.1 million) and will include bicycle service stations.

    http://www.treehugger.com/bikes/new-cycling-superhighway-not-us.html

    Will we ever provide anything like this rural dutch cycleway for our kids to cycle to school on

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OrQ-d2PBUto

    And here (again) is the video showing the Lourdes to Soloum cycleway in the Pyrenees in the south of France. This cycleway is in a rural area, built on an old railway line, in an agricultural and tourist area. The scenery is spectacular, with the mountains and the Grave de Pau river. Two paved cycle lanes and a footpath, no obstacles expect yield signs where it crosses roads. When I think of the kind of cycleways I would like to see us building in Ireland, this is what I think of.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9KFx0jVGqI&feature=related

    We are a very, very long way behind in Ireland, and the rest of Ireland is now a long way behind Mayo. But if we want to go world class this is the kind of thing we are going to have to aim for.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    With regard to the illusion of 'perfect' cycleways on the Continent...

    One of the popular routes is the Canal de Garonne/Canal du Midi, which connects the Atlantic to the Mediteranian, and had a cycleway along its toepath.

    This is the advice for anyone considering cycling its 433km length..

    "There are two ways you can cycle the Canal.

    1. Road bike, on the regional paved roads near the canal. This might take you away from the canal for a bit, and are more windy/less direct.

    2. Hybrid bike or slightly thicker tires on the unpaved, pebble/rock/tree-root strewn paths along the Canal. I recommend this route. It is much prettier and more interesting than the paved roads. Besides when you come to the locks you might have to carry the bike up and down a couple of steps (concrete)."

    So the Mayo Greenway is not so bad after all !

    ;)

    No one but yourself made any reference to perfect cycleways on the continent. Are you saying, here is an example of a poor quality French cycleway this is what we should aspire to.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    Just to note...

    The one from Sweden is a planned urban / inter-urban cycle superhighway (a real one, not a fake London one) -- not too comparable to a rural, mostly for leisure route.

    That's not a cycle way in Bogota, it's a road closed off temporarily for "Ciclovía" -- which is an event where some roads are closed for cyclists every Sunday.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    monument wrote: »
    Just to note...
    That's not a cycle way in Bogota, it's a road closed off temporarily for "Ciclovía" -- which is an event where some roads are closed for cyclists every Sunday.

    I worked that out a minute after I posted it and edited it out. But here is the link
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpQVcRH3ZdE

    Also came across this interesting film about cycling infrastructure in Bogota
    http://www.streetfilms.org/lessons-from-bogota/


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    monument wrote: »
    Just to note...

    The one from Sweden is a planned urban / inter-urban cycle superhighway (a real one, not a fake London one) -- not too comparable to a rural, mostly for leisure route.

    I appreciate that but it does show how far ahead of Ireland mainland Europe is getting on cycling infrastructure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    +1 on the idea of marketing the hard shoulders as a cycling resource and ensuring adequate surfacing etc.

    I understand where you're coming from, but this idea fills me with dread. Painting a couple of lines and road markings down the side of a main road does not a cycle facility make. There is very little that any such road markings could do to make a hard shoulder a more attractive or safer place to cycle. I think this is a get out clause for the government whereby they can delude themselves that they're providing cycling facilites whilst actually not doing any work.
    Additionally, as a marketable resource, I'm not sure that roads with hard shoulders are usually the most scenic and in the areas where tourists would like to travel. As an example, when I cycle from Dublin to Waterford, I would rather travel along small, low traffic volume scenic roads than just stick to the old N9.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    I am sorry but I disagree. Hard shoulders are very much a cycling facility, and walking facility, and the use of hard shoulders puts us way ahead of the British for example whose A roads tend to be way more hostile for cyclists.

    In the 1970s it was reported that using hard shoulders had lead to a 50% reduction in cycling accidents on the treated routes.

    They cannot be promoted as resource for families with small children for instance but for adult cycle tourers they.provide an adequate treatment to be going on with. In particular they provide a means of getting the adult cycle tourers to the more scenic back roads.

    In a word they facilitate a cycling product based on touring rarher than going around in circles.

    Ideally our main roads would have parallel cycleways a la the Netherlands etc. The problem for us is that our highly dispersed population patterns based on the "ribbon development model" make that very difficult. Since it means the cycleways would have to go through peoples front gardens.


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,776 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Additionally, as a marketable resource, I'm not sure that roads with hard shoulders are usually the most scenic and in the areas where tourists would like to travel.

    +1, I think when you're planning a piece of infrastructure like this you need a primary design goal. Either tourism or transport first, and if it offers some degree of the other as a secondary benefit, well and good. I think the greenway illustrates there is both scope and a good market for the former, and this should be repeated elsewhere. As for the quality of surface, I think it is fine for leisure cycling, as rural Ireland already has an abundance of beautiful, quiet rural roads for the keen roadie but far less for the family. I'd be more concerned about erosion and maintenance costs of the softer surface. A bigger concern would be capacity. If you look at the RTE video (about 30 seconds in) and imagine three or four towed buggies going in different directions, with pinch points at narrow gates, it could suffer from congestion very easily.

    Comparing the greenway with European equivalents is a useful exercise, as the economic projections for revenue earned include a significant chunk from foreign tourism. We will compete with those other European routes for the same tourists. I've no doubt many will come and try the greenway, but they will draw comparisons with similar options elsewhere, which will dictate whether or not they return.

    The greenway is still an excellent illustration of what can be achieved on a tight budget, when people make the effort. Hopefully we'll see many similar amenities in the future.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    the use of hard shoulders puts us way ahead of the British for example whose A roads tend to be way more hostile for cyclists.

    In the 1970s it was reported that using hard shoulders had lead to a 50% reduction in cycling accidents on the treated routes.

    I have no issue with this - I definitely agree that roads with hard shoulders are more cycle friendly than those without - Taking the N25 from Rosslare to Cork as an example, you can cycle the length of that without ever really having cars whizzing past you at arms length and that is due to the hard shoulder.

    But what I don't want to see happen is for the government to paint bike symbols on all the hard shoulders and then try to make out that they've created a world class cycle network. This is the kind of thing that happened so much in Dublin - lip service and a few lines of paint on a road and those in charge can wash their hands of it having discharged their obligation. Leave the hard shoulders as they are, and invest the money in better, proper facilities - towpaths, disused railways etc.

    To be honest, I think that an increase in promotion of Ireland as a cycling destination, coupled with increasing awareness by hotels and B&Bs of cyclists as a target market, would do as much if not more to put Ireland into the minds of tourers.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    But what I don't want to see happen is for the government to paint bike symbols on all the hard shoulders and then try to make out that they've created a world class cycle network. This is the kind of thing that happened so much in Dublin - lip service and a few lines of paint on a road and those in charge can wash their hands of it having discharged their obligation. Leave the hard shoulders as they are, and invest the money in better, proper facilities - towpaths, disused railways etc.

    Sorry then we were talking across each other. I agree entirely, unfortunately this is exactly what the current Minister wants to do. At the moment he is funding just such a hard shoulder => "cycle lane" conversion on 54km of interurban road between Nenagh and Limerick. This is being done without any apparent consideration of how it is to be maintained or of the other considerations already raised.

    It is considered a bizarre use of public money when you think what else you could do with it. Indeed Cyclist.ie offered repeatedly to draw up an alternative list of projects.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,842 ✭✭✭Rob A. Bank


    clonmahon wrote: »
    No one but yourself made any reference to perfect cycleways on the continent. Are you saying, here is an example of a poor quality French cycleway this is what we should aspire to.

    And no one but yourself called the Achill cycleway 'crap' 'third rate' and 'mediocre', while suggesting that continental cycleways are 'world class' !

    Perhaps you should check up on state of sections of the Danube cycleway (the most popular holiday cycle route in Europe), before denigrating the Irish effort.

    You seem hung up on the word 'world class' !

    Reality check:- We can forget about any 'world class' infrastructure here, until such time as the Rothschild family and Goldman Sachs have painfully extracted their pound of flesh from us.

    :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    Reality check:- We can forget about any 'world class' infrastructure here, until such time as the Rothschild family and Goldman Sachs have painfully extracted their pound of flesh from us.

    :(

    I wouldn't argue with that


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,944 ✭✭✭Bigus


    clonmahon wrote: »
    The bar is about to be raised on what constitutes a "world class cycle-way". The swedes are planning a 20 km, 4 lane cycling superhighway linking Lund & Malmö. It will cost 50 million Swedish crowns (US$ 7.1 million) and will include bicycle service stations.

    http://www.treehugger.com/bikes/new-cycling-superhighway-not-us.html

    Will we ever provide anything like this rural dutch cycleway for our kids to cycle to school on

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OrQ-d2PBUto

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9KFx0jVGqI&feature=related

    We are a very, very long way behind in Ireland, and the rest of Ireland is now a long way behind Mayo. But if we want to go world class this is the kind of thing we are going to have to aim for.


    With all due respect your foreign youtube clips show me crappy narrow cycleways with a thin line painted on tarmac, polluted with main road noise.

    Not a patch on the Greenway imho.

    Plus the gates and obstacles on the greenway gave myself and the misses a chance to interact with a lot more people than would otherwise be the case.

    I think the surface on the greenway is more in keeping with its Rural surroundings and I prefer the Rural Blinding to the tarmac sections in Westport town .

    You can see where landowners have gone out of their way to accommadate this route and in some instances cyclist are going through open fields with no sign of the old railway and sheep happily munching way either side of the track . I'll glady shut the gate behind me to experience this.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,944 ✭✭✭Bigus


    Stollaire wrote: »
    Would most cycle from Westport to Achill, then stay in Keel that night for example, and cycle back to Westport the next day?

    Sounds like a nice idea for a summer weekend with herself.

    Absolutely a great idea, however the winds nearly always prevail from the west so for a beginner starting at the Achill end might be better. however you can bring the bikes on the train to Westport, or park the car free in the town.

    Nice to have your own bikes rather than rentals.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,088 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    You seem hung up on the word 'world class' !

    Reality check:- We can forget about any 'world class' infrastructure here, until such time as the Rothschild family and Goldman Sachs have painfully extracted their pound of flesh from us.

    :(

    Speaking generally here and not just about the Mayo Greenway...

    There's extra cost in putting in extra barriers, kissing gates, gates, and other things which can detract from a route and that stop a route from being "world class". So, making a route better for cyclists can be cheaper sometimes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 261 ✭✭clonmahon


    Bigus wrote: »
    Plus the gates and obstacles on the greenway gave myself and the misses a chance to interact with a lot more people than would otherwise be the case.

    I think the surface on the greenway is more in keeping with its Rural surroundings and I prefer the Rural Blinding to the tarmac sections in Westport town .

    I guess we differ on this, I prefer my cycleways hard paved and obstacle free.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,842 ✭✭✭Rob A. Bank


    It seems Kerry is getting in on the act too !

    A group was set up to clear and improve the old disused Tralee to Fenit railway line. http://traleetofenitcycleway.wordpress.com/

    They are in a better position than existed in Mayo, in that CIE/Iarnrod Eireann still owns the line and has transferred responsibility to Kerry Co. Council. So at least the 'kissing gates' obstacle problem should be solved on that 12 km length of line.

    They seem to infer that it might be possible to extend the greenway back as far as Adare and possibly even Limerick. That would be a marvelous use of the old disused line, and perhaps the old lines to Dingle, Castlegregory and even Valentia could be considered too.
    http://www.downrail.co.uk/history/photos/Map_Rail_Ireland_Viceregal_Commission_1906.jpg
    (Click image to enlarge when it rezzes)

    BTW Rory O'Donnell, director of Ireland's National Economic and Social Council,(they advise the government on policy) talked to Bloomberg TV on Feb 2nd. He specifically mentioned national cycleways as public works to help alleviate the woeful unemployment problem. He said that there would be a Government announcement on the issue in the next few weeks.
    http://www.bloomberg.com/video/85512086/

    I certainly hope so !

    :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    They are in a better position than existed in Mayo, in that CIE/Iarnrod Eireann still owns the line and has transferred responsibility to Kerry Co. Council.

    Does anybody know which of the old lines are still state owned and which have been sold off?


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