Traffic plan for Dublin may not see light of day, says council

Senior council officials say they had no input into National Transport Authority’s proposal

Under the plans, half of College Green would be turned into a pedestrian plaza. Photograph: Eric Luke/The Irish Times
Under the plans, half of College Green would be turned into a pedestrian plaza. Photograph: Eric Luke/The Irish Times

The National Transport Authority’s plans to eliminate traffic from large parts of Dublin city centre “may never see the light of day” according to the city council’s senior traffic engineers.

The authority’s draft City Centre Transport Assessment Study envisages pedestrianising Suffolk Street and Church Lane, turning the southern half of College Green into a public plaza and removing “general car traffic” from Westmoreland Street.

While the study is dated June 2013, the council’s roads and traffic department received it just two weeks ago, said Brendan O’Brien, the department’s head of technical services. “It wasn’t a joint plan and there’s a lot in that study which may never see the light of day,” he told city councillors.

It was “never intended to be anything other than a discussion document”, he said.

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Michael Phillips, director of traffic and city engineer, said public expectation had been raised that certain changes would be made, but this may have no basis in reality.

“We were very disappointed in this leaked document,” he said. “There are a number of serious issues with it and our worries are that there has been an expectation created out there that we will not be able to deliver.”

He insisted the council did not plan to eliminate the car shopper. “We are very conscious that the car shopper is as important as other modes of transport,” he said. “To keep retail viable in the city centre, what we need to ensure is that there is a balance between all modes of transport.”

Mr Phillips apologised to city councillors who, as members of the traffic committee, should have been the first to be made aware of the proposals.

“We would only bring a document to you that we know was workable that we would see as working on the ground,” he said. “You may agree or disagree with a plan, in which case we would go back and make modifications.”

Putting proposals in the public arena which the council may not be able to deliver created a “backlash and a credibility issue” from which it could take “an awful long time to recover”, Mr Phillips said.

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly is Dublin Editor of The Irish Times