Dan Boyle: New Cork City

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From top: St Patrick’s Street, Cork city lockdown; Dan Boyle

I have never been a fan of the phrase ‘every crisis offers an opportunity’. At its heart is a presumption that misery can be justified if it brings about something better.

That should never be the case. What crises do though is make us evaluate the World in which we live. Ideas that once were considered implausible become valid options when contexts get reevaluated after the effects of crises have been felt.

This is the context into which new examinations of how we use our public spaces are now coming forward.

The reduction in road traffic in our town and city centres is reminding us of what might be possible. It confirms, what many of us have long held, that we have been disproportionate in how we have allocated our streetscapes overwhelmingly for the benefit of motor vehicles.

Air quality in all places is immeasurably better. It is giving us a glimpse of a better future.

Contrary to the views of some, those of us who have argued for these changes are not naive. The motor car will make a comeback. Those, who have come to depend on the personal autonomy the car provides, will demand that what they had should be restored.

Arguments will be made that public transport has become compromised, that whatever measures are put in place to maximise safety in its use, will be undermined by a lack of public confidence to use these services, at least in the short term.

That may be but cities throughout the World are aware of these possibilities and are choosing to reimagine their cities anyway. Road space is being reallocated to create wider pavements and pop up cycle lanes. The space for motor vehicles will consequently reduce.

Irish cities are beginning to follow suit. Dublin has put in place several measures to give effect to these ideas. Cork, while yet to physically put in place such measures, has identified several city centre streets for pedestrianisation.

In Cork I have been impressed that the usual negative voices are not as apparent as they had been. The myth that cars equal business thankfully seems to be abating.

Last week a report was released by Transport for London. This analysed the spending patterns of London commuters depending on their chosen transport mode.

The report confirmed what many other international reports had already stated. Cars users spend less than those who walk, cycle or use public transport, in the cities and towns they traverse.

It has been a truism that has taken so long to be accepted as being true.

I’m still expecting the car lobby to lobby to bring back the bad old days. Its affectation of being an industry is going to become quite challenged. Its model of selling as many cars as possible (whether combustion engine or electric) then encouraging consumers to quickly turnover their vehicles, will become less and less viable.

For cities like Cork I am greatly encouraged to think that ideas that have been lying on dusty office shelves, may soon become a reality.

It will be good to see them in operation on our streetscapes, instead of on the pages of those reports that only sad bores like me ever seemed to have read.

This is the most interesting Green news to have come out of Cork this week.

Dan Boyle is a former Green Party TD and Senator and serves as a Green Party councillor on Cork City Council. His column appears here every Thursday. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle

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16 thoughts on “Dan Boyle: New Cork City

      1. bisted

        …the other eco warriors from Cork are busy trying to unseat the glorious leader at present…loyalist Dan is minding the shop…

  1. Cian

    Dan, Dublin City Council has implemented a number of these ideas. Cork City Council hasn’t done anything concrete.

    Why is this?

    Were the Dublin ones planned pre-COVID and it is just a coincidence they happened now? Or are CCC slacking off?

  2. Otis Blue

    The half-assed manner in which CCC went about restricting traffic on Patrick St and the mess that is the pedestrianisation of Oliver Plunkett offer little grounds for optimism.

  3. Paulus

    Dan is correct about the SIMI’s pretentions to being an industry though.
    A bunch of gel-haired spoofers does not an industry make.

  4. scottser

    i thought dan, you might take the opportunity to mention that energy and fuel prices are through the floor yet our providers are still gouging the poo out the country. banks and insurance companies too. you want green policies to be relevant, yet no mention of tackling the vested interests who are making vast profits during COVID. but yeah, so someone who walks to work might buy a coffee, whoop-de-fukn-do.

  5. Joe Small

    And not a word about Catherine Martin’s potential overthrow of Eamonn Ryan – that’s what I was waiting for!

    1. The Old Boy

      This is the most interesting Green news to have come out of Cork this week.

      I think that would be what Dan was referring to here – the letter that started it was written by four Cork Green councillors.

        1. bisted

          …given Dan’s unfailing ability to be on the wrong side, I think Eamo should be more worried about Dan’s loyalty than the other four langers plotting against him…

          1. Dan Boyle

            Ooh burn. I’m loyal to my family. I’m loyal to my friends. I’m loyal to the work I do and those I try to represent. I’m loyal to Green principles. On occasion I don’t agree with the approach taken by others I work with, and with whom I continue to be friendly. I am sometimes right. I am often wrong. What matters to me is that I true to myself.

          2. bisted

            …if I were a cynic (I know, perish the thought) I’d say Dan was maybe hoping for another stint in the Seanad…a great launching pad for a presidential bid…just saying…

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