Pedestrians Post-Lockdown

Speaker: Iain Nicholson, the City Centre Manager, addressed the meeting on arrangements for Pedestrians in the City Centre post-Lockdown.

Attendees: Sushila Dhall (Chair), Keith Frayn, Don O’Neal, Deborah Glass Woodin, Mary Clarkson, Jake Backus, Peter Thompson, Peter Headicar, Ruth Davis, Simon Hunt, Penny Jaques, Chris Cowley (Secretary)

Iain Nicholson gave a 20-minute presentation about the measures put in place for pedestrians in the City Centre from 15th June (when non-essential shops were allowed to re-open).  The Government had provided a grant of £134,000 to help pay for these measures.  The aim was that everyone moving around in the City Centre should feel safe.

Iain stressed that this was Phase 1 and that measures would be changed as the situation developed.  Bigger projects would follow in Phase 2, in collaboration with the County Council.  He welcomed the views of OxPA’s membership: comments can be left on the City Council website: www.oxford.gov.uk/reopening.  (To see the proposed infrastructure changes, the address is: www.oxfordshire.gov.uk/activetravel).

Iain’s presentation outlined his 10-point plan:

  1. Identify hotspots and introduce one-way pedestrian flows
  2. Stewards to provide guidance to pedestrians and to work with businesses to prevent queues building up
  3. Provide lots of consistent signage
  4. Designated rest areas
  5. Plans for public spaces to include the removal of A-boards and abandoned bicycles and reductions in busking and street trading
  6. Enhanced cleaning and sanitising
  7. Guiding principles for inclusive social distancing
  8. Easier access and egress, including 130 additional bicycle parking places at the Park and Rides (Redbridge 64, Peartree 42, Seacourt 24).
  9. Special measures for the Covered Market and Gloucester Green
  10. Communication with businesses

Iain reflected that the guidance had been partially successful but there was a lot of non-compliance with the one-way pedestrian flows.  Feedback has been mixed (ie some people feeling there was insufficient signage whilst others felt dragooned).  On the first day of trading (Monday 15th June), footfall in Cornmarket was 30,000 pedestrians, which is 29.7% of what it was a year ago

In the discussion which followed the presentation, OxPA members made a number of observations:

In conclusion: The current arrangements are practical and sensible but do nothing to make the City Centre an attractive place for residents to spend extended periods of time (which it was during Lockdown).  The University / Colleges could be encouraged to open up some of their space for residents to enjoy.  The footfall during Open Doors demonstrates that there is an appetite for this.  OxPA members asserted that this is a perfect opportunity for more radical change which should not be missed.  There was general disappointment at the lack of increased pavement space and that no roads were to be closed to motorised traffic immediately.  We hope to see more radical change as time goes on.