Reject Gerrards Cross traffic calming planters will be sent to Southcourt

When residents complained the council decided to send the offending planters to Aylesbury's Southcourt estate
SouthcourtSouthcourt
Southcourt

When residents of affluent Gerrards Cross decided they didn’t like a series of planters which were part of a £28,000 travel scheme the council knew there was only one thing for it...Send them to Southcourt!

Buckinghamshire Council will relocate to Aylesbury a series of decorative planters which were removed from Lower Road and South Park, in Gerrards Cross, after public outrage over lack of prior consultation.

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The so-called “quietway”, between Gerrards Cross and Chalfont St Peter, was swiftly scrapped after a public petition revealed a “clear majority objected to the scheme”.

Campaigners who branded the project “dangerous” also reported the planters had forced traffic into residential roads and were of concern to emergency services.

Gerrards Cross Town Council also opposed the quietway.

The 14 decorative blockades, currently in storage, are now bound for trial in Southcourt, in Aylesbury, in October, according to a council spokesperson.

Buckinghamshire Council revealed it had spent £28,000 implementing the controversial pop-up travel scheme, including on decommissioning the project – with each of the 14 planters costing £360 a piece, including filling and installation.

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The unitary authority was awarded a £514,000 grant by the Department for Transport (DfT), for a series of “temporary active travel schemes” across the county.

The schemes were designed to promote more walking and cycling as people returned to work and leisure activities “as lockdown restrictions gradually ease”.

The quietways are also designed to promote safer roads and air quality and better personal health.

A spokesperson for Buckinghamshire Council said: “The decorative planters are currently in storage and will be reused on another Active Travel Scheme, in Southcourt, Aylesbury, planned for October.”

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Janning Shenoy, of South Park, who helped lead a petition against the scheme to reach in excess of 1,400 signatures, said: “I trust the residents there will want them and that Buckinghamshire Council has done a consultation beforehand – it will be hugely embarrassing for them if they haven’t and there’s further uproar.”

Buckinghamshire Council has been approached to repond to what Janning Shenoy claimed.