Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malborough St

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splurgh
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Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malborough St

Post by splurgh » 26 Feb 2012, 14:51

admin: this post is in reply to following posts on the Rat-running and large vehicles (Bath St, Straiton Pl etc) thread:
wangi wrote:
seanie wrote:The Neighbourhood Partnership will be considering the following report at its next meeting.
...
10
The proposed parking restrictions will displace approximately 35 cars on each street (70 vehicles in total); however, motorists will be able to use surrounding streets and locations where current parking restrictions are limited to peak times only. There is no doubt that this will put additional parking pressure on these surrounding streets, however, it is judged that only the implementation of a controlled, permit only parking zone within Portobello would ultimately manage the overall parking capacity in the area .
and no mention of the parking order which removes further spaces from bottom of Bath St....
I'm shocked. I responded to the traffic consultation in good faith.

I realise Seanie posted this on the 'rat running' thread - but I would like advice concerning what we can do about what they're planning with regard to parking on our streets.

a. They're going to make both Regent Street and Malborough Street one way. This isn't going to improve rat-running on a major school run, but, hey, I can live with that... what I can't live with is...

b. Stopping parking on side of Regent Street and one side of Malborough Street.

See here for a link to the document to be discussed at a meeting on Wednesday (29 Feb).
http://www.edinburghnp.org.uk/media/195 ... v2__2_.pdf

And the 'solution' (!?)
"10 The proposed parking restrictions will displace approximately 35 cars on each
street (70 vehicles in total); however, motorists will be able to use surrounding
streets and locations where current parking restrictions are limited to peak
times only. There is no doubt that this will put additional parking pressure on
these surrounding streets, however, it is judged that only the implementation of
a controlled, permit only parking zone within Portobello would ultimately
manage the overall parking capacity in the area."

I agree that "There is no doubt that this will put additional parking pressure on these surrounding streets" (no kidding) - I frequently drive round the block trying to park NOW - with the Mentone's often double parked, as well as Bellfield Street. And that's with the 70 spaces in play on RS and MS. I simply don't understand where they are expecting us to park... Where are these 70 spaces which are currently time-limited??

My understanding was that the emergency services had signed off on the proposals created for the traffic consultation. There was NO MENTION of a move to cut parking by anything like this amount.

What can we do?

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 26 Feb 2012, 22:31

splurgh wrote:What can we do?
In the first instance make sure you share your views with our three local councillors. Perhaps also consider raising it at the community council tomorrow night?

But I understand the frustration... Were the parking reductions highlighted in the Dec 2011 consultation event in the Town Hall, and the library exhibition? I can't remember seeing that (but that's not conclusive!)

Also, why the lack of imagination - why no consideration of home zones / shared space / Woonerf with echelon parking (at 45 degrees) to maximise parking while also opening up the street for safe access by emergency vehicles?

A bit of creativity is needed - the current parking on pavements is not ideal; but when pushing a pram up the road I've never felt unsafe. Drivers and pedestrians work together already to make it work - seem ideal for a home zone.
L/

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 26 Feb 2012, 22:37

Some other responses online...

http://www.facebook.com/talkporty/posts/138685392921192
Gordon Davie: Not a great thing can be hard to park already in porty at best of times would be a nightmare on a nice day
Suzanne Michelle Davie: Thought the council wanted to bring people to portobello seems they are making it very hard for visitors
Talk Porty ~ Portobello: There's the residential aspect too; but true - it would make it so much harder for visitors & residents to park.
Annie Milovic: The parking situation on these and surrounding streets is chockablock as it is. Where will those 70 cars go?
https://twitter.com/#!/talkporty/status ... 5864263680
@NeilCammo Why can't we implement parking on one side of street, but forget about complicated one way system?

seanie
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 27 Feb 2012, 00:20

Home Zones generally require a fair amount of off street parking to free up space. You'd struggle to make it work given the existing streets. Echelon parking might be a possibility, but it takes up more carriageway than double sided parallel parking, and if single sided doesn't generate any more parking spaces.

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 27 Feb 2012, 08:36

http://www.facebook.com/talkporty/posts/138685392921192
Suzanne McIntosh: I agree with TP/ Wangi - it seems to lack any creativity or imagination. We accept we live in a dense urban area and parking is never going to be easy but the conclusions miss the mark and dont consider all the other aspects that the consultation did. The major rat run from Bellfield to Bath St is not addressed in the slightest. The use of derelict or vacant sites for resident's controlled parking, smaller sections of one way ie straiton Place bwetween Bath and Regent......The numbers of people who've given feedback is a tiny percentage of those who live here which is worrying. Maybe their motivation is to have a permit zone and always has been knowing people would jump up and down at the loss of so much parking - would permits be that bad if it deterred all the multiple vehicle ownerships, white vans, campers etc? Suzanne McIntosh Vehicle tonnage limitations aren't considered nor limiting delivery times.

William Wilson: Is anybody in the slightest bit surprised. I raised this issue at the PCC and ask the comment "no net loss of parking spaces". This is the answer. The reason for the above comment at the PCC was the flats in Windsor Place, 23 with a net gain of three parking spaces would add to overcrowding, resitrictions on the North of High St shifts car parking to the South side. Now I am going to complain.
William Wilson: Windsor Pl has a Post Office distribution (posties cars and vans), a nursery (uses yellows for parental parking), 23 new flats with 6 spaces (net gain 3 spaces), Orcadia and the Earthy Foods Eco friendly Chelsea Tractor Saturday morning crew, shop and bank staff parking, a bit of park and ride and now a share of 70 other cars, not like they don't park there already. What are these oh so clever people going to do about it? Anybody want to run a sweep to see how long it takes to come up with the idea of parking permits, not long I think. As far as I can see this does nothing to address the original complaint. oops, I was too late, how much are they, I'll just park in Brighton Place

Maria Devoy: I'm unclear as to how parking permits are the remedy. As far as I'm aware, the Council currently issue more parking permits than there are spaces, so you can end up really peeved off, as you still can't park , but have paid the Council for the privilege. Have to say though, that I'm not surprised they are proposing cutting spaces. (How many residents thought creating new parking spaces on Straiton Park was a good idea, I wonder?) The emergency services have been very keen, from the outset to ensure proper access for their vehicles. A consultation exercise has to take their views on board, as well as those of residents; just ask Cllr Bridgman about that.

Angela Brown: Oh no, its hard enough finding anywhere to park, nightmare x

seadog6161
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seadog6161 » 27 Feb 2012, 12:33

The matter will be one of the first items in the Neighborhood Partnership meeting on Wednesday evening 6.30pm at The White House on Niddrie Mains Road. This is open to the public.

The plans are not yet a done deal and have to go through a formal process and go through the infrastructure committee etc. However as a Regent Street resident I feel that the plans are not properly thought out as they are surely making more parking problems elsewhere. I urge anyone who wants to stop these plans to make their views heard.

Neither do I believe Regent Street needs to be one way as we all make way for each other quite happily with occasional inconvenience but nothing more. Making the street one way and effectively widening it through one side being cleared of parked cars will only encourage cars to drive faster - endangering kids, pedestrians etc.

Councillors - please take note.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 27 Feb 2012, 17:30

That's one of the reasons the Council weren't keen on making it one-way in the past. There appears to be quite a lot of pressure on the Council to do something about these streets in particular, but what can be done seems pretty limited; there are lots of vehicles, with limited parking space on narrow streets. You can't widen the streets, and the potential for off street parking looks pretty limited. So you're pretty much left with restricting parking in some way which, whilst maybe tackling some of the problems with these streets, is clearly going to have knock on effects.

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 27 Feb 2012, 20:28

Agree - the knock on effects dont seem to have been evaluated as part of this exercise.
I too have been pondering why such a strong focus on those two streets: Regent and Marborough - have been trying to think about whether there has been a fire where they've had difficulties ?
Maybe there are lots of council connections in those streets that hold sway over the rest of us, who knows.
Why still no traffic counts though to really get to the bottom of what's going on, I dont understand why that's not happened.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 27 Feb 2012, 20:43

People using their Council connections to make it more difficult for them to park?
I think the problem may simply be they're genuinely narrow streets, with parking on both sides, that struggle to function. They're pretty quiet because of that but it's still a problem.

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 27 Feb 2012, 21:11

That's the key - they are quiet because passage is made difficult so the converse is that other streets are busy because passage is easy. We never get a balance only extremes.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 27 Feb 2012, 21:23

Well we have a street pattern laid out about 200 years ago, so working within those constraints what's to be done. I've heard a few people mention Home Zones, and they're appealing in many ways, but I can't see that being workable without a massive reduction in parking. I think the realistic options are;

a) what we've got,
b) what we've got with reduced parking,
c) what we've got in terms of parking but a one-way system,
d) a one-way system and with reduced parking.

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 28 Feb 2012, 00:13

wangi wrote:Perhaps also consider raising it at the community council tomorrow night?
Well that was a bit lively! I think the message that there was a general disappointment in the proposals was made...

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 28 Feb 2012, 08:52

Any consensus on a preferred alternative?

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 28 Feb 2012, 09:33

Interesting that this will go the same way it did over a decade ago when Slicker and co raised it many mnay years ago. Nothing's new.

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Porty
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Porty » 28 Feb 2012, 12:09

Yep it is the same problem. It seems to me there is no solution that will please or satisfy everybody, no obvious remedy.

I imagine PCC would find it difficult to reach consensus.

Letter to Council advising them why they suck, is my guess.
.....ambition makes you look pretty ugly

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by bearcub » 28 Feb 2012, 18:03

seanie wrote:Well we have a street pattern laid out about 200 years ago, so working within those constraints what's to be done. I've heard a few people mention Home Zones, and they're appealing in many ways, but I can't see that being workable without a massive reduction in parking. I think the realistic options are;

a) what we've got,
b) what we've got with reduced parking,
c) what we've got in terms of parking but a one-way system,
d) a one-way system and with reduced parking.
It's clear that the consultation wasn't going to result in an a), but I would have expected them to say "let's try b) or c) and see if they help", instead of going all in for d) and just annoying the residents...especially when b) wasn't even mentioned for Marlborough/Regent St in the consultation in the library.

Also, I thought the one-way "system" was suggested as an answer to the rat-run problem, but without Straiton Place being one-way, it's no answer at all to it!

Marlborough/Regent don't contribute to the rat-run, as drivers just aren't heading down those streets to save time, but they do head down Bath/Bellfield then Straiton to dodge the High St scrum...genius, let's come up with a solution that doesn't address that!

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Makaveli » 28 Feb 2012, 18:20

Every time I read about the rat running issue the one solution that keeps coming back to me is getting rid/synchonising the pedestrian crossing outside the town hall with the junction lights. Once again this morning the pedestrian lights were on red and the junction lights were on green - this equalled standstill!!!!

I don't see why the council don't give this a shot first as it would take some of the pressure off the high street.

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 28 Feb 2012, 20:37

Agree Makaveli - I hope you have put this suggestion in - or my facebook group on Portobello Traffic Nightmares - we have quite a number of members including one of our local councillors and MSP. Please feel free to join people.

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Skeely
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Skeely » 28 Feb 2012, 21:18

I'm all for the reduction in car parking spaces. All those cars make it difficult to cycle on the pavement.

<ducks>

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Skeely
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Skeely » 28 Feb 2012, 21:56

Seriously though, I think increasing traffic flow on the High Street is a rotten idea. Reducing traffic flow instead would encourage traffic to use Milton Rd / Harry Lauder Road, making Porty much more pleasant at rush hour.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Makaveli » 28 Feb 2012, 22:10

But what about all the folk that don't go near Sir Harry Lauder? I have no need to go to Sir Harry Lauder or Milton Road for the morning nursery run and I know plenty others that are the same as us. Sir Harry Lauder is for folk coming in off the A1 and has more than enough traffic on it as it is.

What Porty needs is to look at ways to keep the traffic flowing without encouraging more traffic. An almost impossible task I am sure you would all agree but I do firmly believe that by altering the sequence of the pedestrian crossings at peak times you could ease a lot of Porty's traffic build up.

Personally I would get rid of the pedestrian crossing at the town hall as I really don't see the need for it with a traffic light junction so close to it.

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 28 Feb 2012, 22:17

I think maybe they should be looking at a much wider area than just the Bath St to Bellfield section - its foolish to change one part without examining the impacts on the whole. They've started here and that's fine but the impacts could be catastrophic in places if it carries on in such a blinkered way.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Franck » 29 Feb 2012, 10:31

Make both of the street cul-de-sacs like they did in Rosefield Avenue.One blocked off at the north end, one at the south.Remove a couple of spaces at each end to allow turning.

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Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Chas » 29 Feb 2012, 15:08

Franck wrote:Make both of the street cul-de-sacs like they did in Rosefield Avenue.One blocked off at the north end, one at the south.Remove a couple of spaces at each end to allow turning.
Best suggestion I've read... so far =D>
He attacked everything in life with a mix of extraordinary genius and naive incompetence, and it was often difficult to tell which was which - Douglas Adams

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 29 Feb 2012, 16:52

Really? What's the problem currently with Regent St & Marlborough that would be solved by that... There is little space for fire engines to travel down the road; however they do not really suffer from "rat running" since the same lack of space makes them slow.

It was rat running east-to-west Bellfield - Straiton - Bath St that was a big point of concern by local residents at the start of this process. That has been ignored. The consultation proposed three options; none of which included loss of parking on Regent & Marlborough. The proposal doesn't bear any resemblance to the consultation. Further the choice of options in the consultation were very poor - leading to a split of the support for one-way along Straiton. Council takes that as showing no support for one-way, rather than considering the two options together to demonstrate 2/3rd wanted it...

Much is made of the unsafe nature of Regent St & Marlborough St due to the restricted road space and how that means fire engines will be unable to quickly tend to a fire. But what do the fire service actually feel about it? It came out on Monday night that they were not too concerned - sure the fire engines might not make it down the streets, but they have hoses and access to hydrants.

The proposal should be scrapped. A proper exercise is needed, on the wider issues, where residents are truly consulted and help formulate the solution.

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 29 Feb 2012, 18:55

Well said

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Porty » 29 Feb 2012, 23:38

What about making both Bath and Bellfield street one waywith both being tha same way. Exeptions for emergency and refue vehicles.
.....ambition makes you look pretty ugly

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Puerto bella
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by Puerto bella » 02 Mar 2012, 01:10

Wangi - did you go to the meeting?
I heard from a reliable source that there is to be a proper traffic assessment/ analysis done and a door to door survey for a much wider area - lets hope that those inform debate and decent conclusions about what's to be done.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 09:23

What's the rationale for Straiton Place being two-way?

From the report it looks as if the concern is that, if one-way, it will become more of a rat run as the traffic can speed up. But it can only really be a rat run east to west, so what's the problem with it being one-way west to east?

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 14:35

Just to understand what's required to accommodate vehicles and parking I did some research. Here are passing widths;
road dims.gif

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 14:56

I also looked at echelon parking;
echelon 45 & 30 large.gif

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 15:04

The dimensions for the last two were taken from guides to Home Zones, although there's too much parking for them to really qualify as such. But it shows you need wide streets to accommodate echelon parking.

Just by way of comparison, Brighton Place is about 12.4m. If you halved the size of the pavements and made the road one-way, then you could just fit in echelon parking at 30 degrees on one side and parallel parking on the other. If you didn't have bends in the carriageway to slow traffic you could squeeze a few more in, but overall the parking wouldn't be that much different from double sided parallel parking.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 15:13

Maybe if we looked across Portobello as a whole, there may be streets wide enough to accommodate echelon parking in an attempt to alleviate pressure on the narrower streets, but the narrower streets themselves won't accommodate it.

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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by seanie » 02 Mar 2012, 15:24

Here are the dimensions for the parking;
home zone parking.gif

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wangi
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Re: Loss of 70 parking spaces on Regent Street and Malboroug

Post by wangi » 02 Mar 2012, 22:34

https://twitter.com/#!/DavidManson2011/ ... 6896737281
David Manson ‏ @DavidManson2011

Portobello/Craigmillar Partnership stopd proposed parking ban in Regent/Marlborough St. To report on all traffic probs in Portie. Sensible.

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