henryscat wrote:
Roger wrote:
henryscat wrote:
All of this is hysterical. There's nothing wrong with rising bollards, people are generally intelligent enough to know that they're trying to drive somewhere they shouldn't - and if their vehicle gets damaged its only what they deserve.
Would your "get what they deserve" apply to pedestrians and cyclists too, eg, a spike strip to puncture cyclists' tyres if they transgressed onto a footpath, or a stun beam at chest height for pedesdtrians attemptint to cross a road at places other than designated road crossings?
Nope, why should it? Pedestrians and cyclists are hardly a danger to others, motorised vehicles generally injure pedestrians/cyclists - I've yet to hear of it being the other way round.
I should post up a photo of my deep wound which required a load of stitches then

How did I get this deep wound? Was walking on a pavement in a town centre when..

....idiot on a bicycle decided to push me into the deep trench of the gas works..

when he barged past ILLEGALLY on the pavement .. It was a long drop ...
on the plus side.. played up the walking wounded so that my "concerned" wife would slave to my every whim
In me dreams ..
But it was jolly painful .. and I still have a scar...

It also ruined a decent pair of trousers.. all that blood
Er.. you were saying?
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Hardly a danger?
Pah!
Oh .. and from my "junior doc" days - whilst on an A&E stint .. we used to get a fair old number of cyclists injured by other cyclists.. people and kids injured by cyclists either riding on pavements.. doing wheelies on speed humps (still get these..

)
By the way.. enough bicycles on say a critical mass and those bollards could easily be duped into "sensorising" that all them bikes "are like a car width"

They've already got it wrong for a bus ..

.
There is more.. my sister tells me that a main shopping street between an Aldi supermarket and an Asda store is set to get some of these bollards to prevent all cars and bikes from travelling down the road
.. bikes
-- um - perhaps -

motorbikes

- but somehow my two sisters in the vicinity are unwilling to test this out on their "shopping" bicycles (They have those twee things with the wicker basket :rolleyes: For all their practice on these bikes.. they finished before me

on the "recent epic"
That blasted cyclist who gashed my leg .. ggrrrr! last year
It's his fault! grrrr! OK the real reason I finished last.. .. bloke with Classic 1950s Merc
.. We got talking..
) ) Howver, per the "Bolton News" paper report two weeks or so ago ... the bollards are supposed to allow delivery vans down this road..
Question people are asking.. taxis used to be allowed down the road to pick up shoppers - especially elderly and disabled as this is quite a long shopping street apparently.
These bollards will compromise that facility for them :rolleyes:
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It is not appropriate to have cars/goods vehicles in busy parts of town centres,
It is not appropriate to have cyclists cycling in pedestrianised zones or on footpaths either
But as for goods vehicles?
How do goods actually arrive in the shops? and just sometimes you may have bought something heavy and need to use the road to pick up the goods as well
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or where there are heavy flows of buses which are using the road space more efficiently than does the rest of traffic.
Manchester was recently gridlocked by competing buses per the Manchester press.. hardly an "efficient use of road space.. nobody .. not even cyclists could move ... according to the newspaper's report ..

twomn months' or so ago ...

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Since many drivers are completely incapable of respecting restrictions in certain areas, measures like rising bollards are necessary.
One of those drivers was disabled .. she saw a free disabled bay at the other side of the "taboo" area .. and asked for permission via the intercom. She's the one whose baby could have been killed by these :f:censored: efforts
I am sure you would say the baby and her disabled mother and disabled grandmother all "got what they deserved" if they happened to have become very dead as a a result of this ..
One of my sisters has since been into Manchester city centre and observed the goings on for herself. She says the signs should be a lot clearer.. especially in a town still undergoing major works after the 1996 IRA bomb attack .... She reckons the locals who shop in the small local 'burbs and who are infrequent visitors to Manchester centre would be "lost" as it has changed very much over the last ten years in looks, feel, atmoshere and features.