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Trial of chicane barriers on Capel St and Parliament St ends with surveying to continue
Dublin City Council has confirmed that the end date for the trial of chicane barriers on Capel Street and Parliament Street was yesterday.IrishCycle.com reported on Wednesday that councillors said that the obstacle course had made a dogs dinner and a mess of both streets. The traffic cones and other barriers were placed along the streets daily during weekdays after the morning delivery times, with nine (9) sets in the 420-metre section of Capel Street and five (5) sets on the 130-metre-long Parliament Street.Councillors at a meeting on Monday expressed mixed views on the solutions, including more targeted enforcement against electric bikes or mopeds used by delivery riders and others, which are seen as the main source of inappropriate speed. Most of these devices are effectively outright illegal, as they require registration, tax and insurance, but cannot be registered.They are often confused with legal electric bicycles, as both include batteries and pedals. But pedal-assisted bicycles, which are legally treated the same as bicycles, must not have a throttle that allows for continuous movement without pedalling, the assistance from the motor must cut out at 25km/h, and the continuous rated power of the motor must be no more than 250 watts.Some councillors and the campaign group I Bike Dublin pointed out that the barriers were putting people walking and those using bicycles, electric scooters, and illegal motorised bikes into smaller spaces, causing more conflicts. The Dublin Cycling Campaign on Wednesday said: Wed absolutely back what I Bike Dublin say in this IrishCycle.com piece.The article included a statement from I Bike Dublin, which noted that Capel Street was only the second bridge across the River Liffey, after the Samuel Beckett Bridge, to provide cycling facilities in two directions segregated from motor traffic. The group said: We think that the 15 sets of cones and barriers that are creating unnecessary conflict between people walking and cycling on Capel Street and Parliament Street could be put to much better use to create safe, segregated cycling routes on OConnell Bridge.Dublin City Council told this website yesterday that 16/07/2026 was the end date for the trial, and when asked how the results of the trial are being recorded, a spokesperson said: A number of surveys have been undertaken, and this will continue.Asked why Section 38 of the Road Traffic Act was not used for the traffic calming measures, the spokesperson said: No requirement to, there was no change to the use of the road, deliveries were still facilitated as were emergency access, pedestrians and cyclists could still freely use the road no exclusion was being made to any group of users, no statutory signs needed changing.A council spokesperson added: There is no change to the use or purpose of the road, no changes were made to either the designation of the street or the vehicles who could use it therefore there was no legislative changes required.Section 38 of the Road Traffic Act 1994 is the primary legislation governing traffic calming measures in Ireland. It also covers trials of temporary measures using removal materials this was the Councils position, reaffirmed by the Court of Appeal in the Strand Road case, which the Council won on appeal.Section 38 is used by other councils for traffic-calming measures, even where there are no access restrictions for road users. For example, Galway County Council has an ongoing consultation for raised junction tables. Public consultation is not strictly required for traffic calming under Section 38, but, according to guidelines, it is for trials using these regulations.Asked why the measures were not needed at night or at the weekends, the spokesperson said: The measures are aimed at collecting information about how cyclists are using the street and what measures cause a reduction in speed; they are not intended to be permanent measures but are a data collection exercise.There were road traffic control crews with 5-6 or more staff dotted along the streets while the trial was ongoing. Asked about the cost of this, the spokesperson said: There are minimal costs involved as we have traffic management staff who attend these streets twice every day, and this is funded from the traffic maintenance budget.
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