Mark A
|
|
« on: September 18, 2024, 15:21:59 » |
|
The Hawes - Garsdale thread put me in mind of all those towns just a few miles from mainline stations and served by branches. Even in the 1960s, it wouldn't have taken a great leap of inspiration for a general principle to be established that the infrastructure should be repurposed for active travel routes to the stations.
Local to the coffeeshop we have Kemble to Cirencester (~4 miles), Kemble to Tetbury (~7 miles). Then, there's Clevedon to Yatton, a complete no-brainer. Yes the M5 is in the way but that's what bridges are for.
E-bikes now strengthen the potential greatly, and would eat, say, Bridport to Maiden Newton which is only around ten miles (though held back by Maiden Newton not exactly being a great metropolis, no offence intended). Cirencester to Kemble or Bath - Midsomer Norton would meet a real need though, Cirencester's population being ~20,000 and MSN and area has a population of is it 40,000, ~10 miles from Bath via a now somewhat disrupted S&D▸ trackbed and an e-bikeable ~ 14 miles from Bristol.
It was presumably down to transport planners' (lack of) perceptions of cycling as a travel mode + the need to positively intervene, and at the time the penny didn't drop.
An interesting test for the future might be Thornbury, because when the extractive quarrying comes to a close and the branch loses its frieght, the line will offer the basis for a cycle route to the station at Yate.
Key to predictable travel times - surface quality & route continuity. Also, minimising the need to cross road on the flat. Much of the branch line rail infrastructure offered precisely that and for distances under a dozen miles, the chance should have been grasped with both hands, in which case even in low population rural south Dorset, the sight of an ordinary person on an e-bike sailing rather effortlessly home from the shops and heading up the likes of Loders bank... would be an unremarkable sight, as would a steady procession of people cycling to Yatton Station from Clevedon, in the process crossing the as yet unbuilt M5 bridge.
Mark
|