The council of Bilbao, where I live, has decided to implement a blanket 20 km/h (approx 30 mph) speed limit across the whole town, having introduced a lower speed limit in many streets a year ago. Bilbao is roughly the same size as Cambridge or Southend (16 sq.mi), but has twice the population (345,000) and it is part of a much larger metropolitan area. 62,000 cars enter the town every working day, though public transport (buses, 4 train networks, metro and tram) is excellent, the bike lane network is good and parking is well provided, although expensive.
As a pedestrian, bus and metro user and occasional cyclist and motorist, I can see great advantages but tremendous drawbacks to a "one size fits all" project, and I suspect it is a social experiment with a bit of marketing and publicity thrown in (no other town or city of 300,000 or more residents in the world has a blanket 30 speed limit, so we will, like it or not, be firmly on the map when this starts.)
There is a strong cultural disdain here for rules and regulations, and I envisage conflicts between law-abiding motorists and the impatient, selfish drivers who want to "make progress". There are several two and three lane stretches of road in Bilbao, many well away from pedestrians, and there will be lots of zig-zagging and jockeying for position, plus the usual scramble for the green light before it changes.
Drivers used to a certain engine and road speed, driving in a particular gear ("I always drive in 3rd, don'tcha know?" - we know the type!) and covering certain A to B sections of a regular journey in the same time every day will get caught out. Locals and outsiders will react differently. People will forget. Journey times will take longer, tempers will get frayed.
Yet lives will be saved, injuries reduced and pollution *may* be reduced (the jury seems to be out on this one).
Any thoughts from backroomers living in long-term 20 zones?
Edited by Bilboman on 24/08/2020 at 14:00
|