The Evening Standard today splashed with ’Floating Garden for New
Thames Bridge’. It elaborated the only mysterious aspect of Mayor of London
Boris Johnson’s otherwise tedious 2020 Vision unveiled last week, a 'garden
bridge'.
Then no further details, other than
it would be a bridge across the Thames lined with trees, were given. And now we
see why.
Apparently, the plan, conceived by
Thomas Heatherwick - he of the petal torch at the Olympics and the considerably
less successful B of the Bang in Manchester - has won a Transport for London
contest to ’improve pedestrian access across the Thames’. A fine idea, I'm sure
we can agree, but the proposed location linking Covent Garden to the Southbank is
possibly the worst spot they could have chosen.
For that area of the Thames possibly
has among most generous provision of bridges, pedestrian and otherwise,
anywhere along the river. Only in 2003, I was one of several journalists who
covered the opening of the two, excellent Golden Jubilee Bridge. Flanking
Hungerford Bridge, the two link from the Embankment, by Covent Garden, directly
with the Southbank.
And disregarding the crossing at
Blackfriars, the Millennium Bridge is only a 20 minute walk away, so peaceful
pedestrian crossing is not hard to find.
According to the Standard piece,
mayoral advisers believe the new bridge ’would bring to life the quiet
stretches around Temple and the east of the Southbank Centre’.
Firstly, I'm not sure where this
quiet spot on the Southbank is as it's a hive of activity from Westminster
Bridge to London Bridge and beyond. Secondly, the peace around Temple offers a
welcome respite. The gardens of the Inns of Court sit there as well as several
small, but well-tended and used public parks. And the peace of this spot is
questionable anyway considering the traffic of the Embankment roars by
ferociously.
The other great problem, which the
Standard fails to mention and Boris perpetually does his best to avoid, is the
concept of building a new bridge in the relatively well-catered for West End
would be an enormous two fingers to the poor people of East London who are
desperately in need of a new river crossing.
Beyond Tower Bridge crossings are
dreadful and despite the growing population one of Boris' first acts as mayor
was to cancel a planned new bridge. No new provision has been made, though
there was talk of a new tunnel which has got nowhere. Though there is, of
course, Boris’ ludicrous, increasingly costly cable car, going from
nowhere to nowhere.
The excellent blogger MayorWatch has
charted the increasingly sorry story of the #dangleway: the foolish ambition;
the misguided planning and strategy; the obfuscation; the swallowing of public
money despite promises otherwise; and now, the pathetic decline in numbers and
it’s horrible unreliability. It was and will ever be a vanity project, one
which the next mayor will have no choice but to firmly wash of their hands.
The whole bridge scheme remains very
flimsy - theoretically, not practically of course. Though, I should say, the
concept of a garden bridge, in another location, remains very appealing.
But this plan apparently has Boris’
support, though the Standard has no supporting comment from the blonde, shaggy
one. Boris, today described by Nick Clegg as a slacker’, obviously enjoys these
flights of whimsy as it seems to make him think he’s doing his job. And as
the piece makes clear no money is in the offing from either his office or TfL,
it would be no surprise if it was right up his alley.
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