Good to see the new
Transport for New Homes report making
the BBC» .
The
Melksham Neighbourhood Plan is online and Melksham Town Council and Melksham Without Parish Council are consulting on a draft of it for a period of 6 weeks between Monday 1st June - Monday 13th July 2020. I am posting up here in the TransWilts line board as there is much to be learned from the Transport for New Homes report for Melksham, and I am delighted to see many of the lessons reported by TfNH have arisen in the plan. Also interesting to see how similar their bus and rail integration logo is to the one that Lisa came up with to represent
Option 24/7 a few years ago.
From the report:
Garden Villages and Garden Towns: Visions and Reality
From Kent to Carlisle, the Government wants to build more than 50 Garden Villages and Garden Towns to help tackle the country’s housing supply crisis.
Garden Communities are envisaged as sociable, green communities, each with a centre that is easily walked to and a transport system built for sustainability.
Our new report, Garden Villages and Garden Towns: Visions and Reality, found that the reality threatens to be very different.
For Melksham:
"Garden Communities are envisaged as sociable, green communities, each with a centre that is easily walked to and a transport system built for sustainability."
So many of the elements exist and are proposed for plugging together in the neighbourhood plan ... yet we currently have a disjoint public transport system with links and common information missing, and cycling and walking routes that are good in parts but then come to an end spilling major cycling flows onto "A" class roads between barriers, and with waymarking is some key places notable by its absence.
The neighbourhood plan is full of good intent. But the pictures in the TfNH report illustrating how it really should not be look exactly as if they could have been taken in certain Melksham locations built invert recent years. We need to make sure that the neighbourhood plan prevails - the irony being that if it does, it will be for the good of the developers making for very much more saleable houses with excellent links to the town on cycle and foot, and an integrated public transport network fit for the health, climate and future.