nasaroc wrote:I would register a slight degree of caution when I hear you talk of Bruges and the Dutch cities having a better approach to this problem. These cities have sensibly done this by largely banning the motor car from their centres, pedestrianising large areas or making parking for vehicles absurdly expensive or non-existent.
Errr ... no! I guess you have not done it by car?
I regulary drive to Brugges. I can drive straight through (at a steady 50kph) or always park in the centre at reasonable cost or within walking distance free. The car is hardly visible which may explain your supposition. The same was true of the last Dutch city I visited (sorry Dutch placenames all look like random keystrokes to me:)
Brugges is a compact heavily visited heritage site with the most challenging terrain in a poorer country. The result, as I think you agree, is both convenient and delightful.
Scratch the surface of any UK road planner and he (always seems to be a he) will say "improve the road for car users and you just get more cars". Absolutely right of course. Because London public transport is so diabolical few car owners would choose to travel by bus/train/tube if they can avoid it. When you force people onto public transport (Ken Livingstone's current policy) you can charge outrageous fares and provide very poor service - and still tax the users to boot.
You have all the ingredients to create an inefficient traffic system which costs use of all transport modes dear.
If, as in many continental countries, you have superb low cost non-car access, then people actually freely choose to travel that way. It even makes room for more pleasureable car access too.