Phase One aimed to test our approach and our tools through focussing on Wakefield itself, looking at cycling routes to the north and south, and walking improvements in the north east, of the city centre. The proposals have been developed through workshops with key stakeholders, street audits, data analysis and technical assessments of potential improvements. Further stakeholder engagement was undertaken in winter 2019 to get feedback on the proposals.
We are now taking the LCWIP process into the next phase and look to build upon the work done in this initial pilot. We’ll be looking at key cycling routes and walking areas across the district and assessing what improvements we can make to make these active travel modes both safer and more attractive. This will include everything from improving the quality of our pavements to building new pedestrian crossings and protected cycle routes. The LCWIP proposals, like those identified during Phase One, will be identified ahead of funding being allocated meaning that as money becomes available we will know how and where we can best spend it to make the biggest improvements. In this way both the Phase One Wakefield LCWIP pilot and the next stage we are starting now inform and support our Connectivity Infrastructure Plan for the region, which sets out the a 20-year transport infrastructure investment programme in West Yorkshire.
A more detailed Phase One Wakefield LCWIP report is available that explains the analysis carried out to identify the improvements proposed as well as high level network concepts for cycling and walking in the geographic areas of focus.
A range of cycle routes into the city centre were identified and prioritised as a result of data analysis and stakeholder feedback. Two routes which could form the base of a future network were assessed in more detail to establish how we could create high-quality cycle provision on these corridors. By high-quality cycle provision we mean routes that make cycling safer and more pleasant, and routes that are suitable for a range of users including schoolchildren and the elderly as well as all types of cycle, including adaptive and cargo bikes. The process of route prioritisation is described in the detailed phase one report for the Wakefield LCWIP.
For each of the two routes assessed, two potential options were identified. Further work will need to be carried out to ensure that the outline design shown here can be achieved to the requisite standard. Further links which will connect these routes to other communities to widen access and link to other parts of the district will be considered during future stages of LCWIP development.
We will also consider complementary measures such as waiting/loading restrictions and improved landscaping, lighting and public realm. In order to make accessing the cycle routes safer we may need to consider re-routing or limiting through traffic on certain roads to create safer streets, which will provide further benefits for local communities such as better air quality and reduced noise pollution.
We will also look at programmes to support the proposed improvements, including providing access to bikes or enabling behaviour change. These complementary measures would be defined as and when we take schemes further forward, including at further stages of the LCWIP process.
These pedestrian improvements for Wakefield city centre, focussing on routes for communities immediately outside of the north east of the centre, have been identified through a community street audit which allowed local stakeholders to provide feedback on the local walking environment, with a follow up workshop. Further detailed feasibility and design work will need to be carried out at a later stage, informed by this initial assessment. Future walking improvement assessments will need to be made for other areas of the city.
The proposed walking infrastructure could also be accompanied by a range of complementary measures to be defined in further stages of LCWIP development. Complementary measures could include new waiting/loading restrictions; improved enforcement of existing waiting/loading restrictions; behaviour change programmes; restrictions to general traffic; improved landscaping and lighting and accessible seating.
The detailed report available here includes further details of the proposed improvements, the approach taken to identify the pedestrian improvements for Wakefield city centre, as well as an indicative walking Network Map for the town, showing the main routes for walking, and other important pedestrian routes. The principles for good walking infrastructure used to help identify the improvements needed are also included in the report.