- Posts: 14
- Joined: Fri Jul 18, 2014 7:02 pm
george wrote:Not sure what Ash's link is supposed to show? If you zoom in the line clearly indicates the track running through the houses on Kirton close. On satellite images you can even see the trees that line the former track bed to the North West of Kirton Close/Fairwood Close, and a handful more immediately adjacent to the north west end of Kirton close itself. So much for good planning. These houses are slap bang in the way and should to go. Unless you're looking at the 1945 google earth images of fairwater, then there is no route from the city line to join the disused track that avoids houses/roads. Sacrificing a couple of dozen houses to provide much needed infrastructure for 6000 future homes, plus all the existing areas that will also benefit? Not much of a price to pay. Obviously owners of these homes should be compensated appropriately - its not their fault their homes got built in a stupid location.
Did you read my post immediately before yours? 15 homes demolished according to the LDP, with many more affected. An alternative would be to tunnel through the cliff above the Taff, north of here, on the City Line and create a new line, arcing anticlockwise and rejoining the Waterhall line about half a mile west.
The problem for the Labour group is that public transport will have to be massively improved to serve Plas Dŵr or traffic will become a real problem. Heavy or light rail will require demolition of those homes on Kirton close with many more badly affected by the noise of 8tph for 16 hours per day (unless my suggestion is followed, and I have no idea how practical that would be).
The alternative is Bus Rapid Transit but Labour know that would be hugely unpopular in the Canton and Riverside wards and would probably lose them those seven seats on the council for many years to come.