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London Assembly votes for full audit of Garden Bridge - concerns include cycling ban

Assembly members vote 11 to 3 to urge Boris Johnson to hold inquiry - and call on TfL to withdraw funding

The London Assembly (GLA) has called on Mayor of London Boris Johnson to order a full, independent inquiry into the procurement process behind the controversial Garden Bridge project, and to withdraw proposed Transport for London (TfL) funding of £30 million towards the estimated £175 million cost.

This morning at City Hall, assembly members debated a motion proposed by Liberal Democrat Caroline Pidgeon over the Thomas Heatherwick designed scheme linking the South Bank to the Temple, which has been championed by the actress Joanna Lumley, and which is the subject of a judicial review.

The motion read:

This Assembly notes with concern the many objections to the proposed Garden Bridge from a wide variety of individuals and organisations, from the Taxpayers’ Alliance to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. Objections have been raised over: the proximity to other crossings, the blocking of historic views of the Thames, the procurement process, the lack of cycling provision, the lack of a guaranteed right of way or step free access, the loss of over 30 mature trees on the South Bank, and the GLA underwriting ongoing maintenance costs running into millions.

This Assembly believes that, with no cycling provision or guaranteed public right of way and given the proximity to other bridges, the project serves no transport function, and it is therefore inappropriate that £30 million of Transport for London money has been committed to it.

This Assembly further believes that the public money earmarked for the project would be much better allocated to pedestrian/cycle river crossings where there is a genuine transport need, such as the proposed Brunel Bridge at Rotherhithe/Canary Wharf, or spent creating and improving green public spaces in other parts of the city.

This Assembly therefore calls on the Mayor to agree to a full, independent audit of the procurement process, and to withdraw TfL funds from the project.

Other objections raised by opponents include that it will be closed at night and for corporate events, create dangerous overcrowding at either end, and that despite plans to build it partly using public money - £30 million from TfL, and £30 million from the Treasury - it is a tourist attraction rather than transport infrastructure.

Questions were raised by the Observer newspaper last month about the validity of the procurement process that saw Heatherwick Studio appointed.

Heatherwick has long championed by Lumley, who is a trustee of the Garden Bridge Trust, as the favoured candidate to design it, despite having much less relevant experience than the two unsuccessful bidders.

In passing today’s motion by a margin of 11 votes to three, the London Assembly joins opponents of the scheme including author Will Self, who has described it as “crap,” and Turner Prize-winning artist Grayson Perry, who tweeted: “It seems like a nice idea that is in the wrong place and for the wrong people. They should build it in Hull.”

“There are many locations along the Thames, from Rotherhithe to Canary Wharf, where there is a far more pressing need for a bridge serving pedestrians and cyclists than the site of the Garden Bridge,”Pidgeon said after today’s vote.

"If the objective of the Garden Bridge is to improve London’s public spaces then it is folly to cut down more than 30 mature trees and reduce much valued open space on the south bank.  £60 million of public funding could be far better spent improving numerous parks and open spaces across the capital.

"At the same time it is vital that an independent audit is carried out looking into the whole procurement process as there are serious questions about how the design contract was awarded.”

Labour’s Valerie Shawcross, who seconded the motion, said: “We’ve seen overwhelming opposition to the Garden Bridge from all parts of our community and yet millions of pounds of TfL and GLA funds are being eaten away by this unwanted project.

"The Garden Bridge was sold to Londoners as a transport project and yet it fails to guarantee public right of way or step free access and there’s no provision for cycling.

“Local residents will undoubtedly feel the impact of increasing numbers of tourists in what is already a congested area and it’s likely we’ll see the fine open vista of the river and St Pauls cluttered and obscured.

"It is wholly inappropriate to spend £30 million of TfL funds on what is essentially a tourist attraction which offers little in terms of actual infrastructure.

"This is money which should be allocated to genuine transport projects, including building river crossings where they are actually needed, such as in East London. A full audit of the Garden Bridge procurement process is entirely right if the public are to have any faith in this project.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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15 comments

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goggy | 8 years ago
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The only way for cyclists and pedestrians to get across the Thames in East London seems to be the Greenwich Foot Tunnel, with constantly broken lifts and seemingly endless debate about cyclists riding through it (rather than walking through it with cleats).

You would have thought that a bridge there may be more appropriate.  105

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sanderville | 8 years ago
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Civil disobedience.

All politicians, police and council bureaucrats claim to be public servants. Politicians claim to have given themselves to a life of public service.

How can you be disobedient to your servant? Telling your servant that you are not happy with their performance can never be disobedience. When you have to go out into the street and shout about it the servants are the disobedient ones.

People who believe that they have some kind of democratic authority and that public servants answer to them really need to stop and ask themselves how they can be the disobedient ones in such a relationship.

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PaulBox | 8 years ago
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It just seems so ridiculous to me that they can't work together to create something that would both look quite impressive and be useful. Surely a segregated cycle lane wouldn't detract from what the organisers are trying to create? And if they could put it somewhere that would divert cyclists from other bridges, and therefore make the motorists happy too, that has got to be a good thing for all concerned. But £175m for a useless park over the river is just mental.

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ianrobo | 8 years ago
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because the GLA was needed to stop the pretence that the Mayor is an elected dictator who picks his own friends as 'advisors'. It is why most of the rest of the country rejected it.

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bikebot replied to ianrobo | 8 years ago
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ianrobo wrote:

because the GLA was needed to stop the pretence that the Mayor is an elected dictator who picks his own friends as 'advisors'. It is why most of the rest of the country rejected it.

The GLA is another body, not your mistake, I've just noticed that the lead paragraph is wrong.

Quote:

The London Assembly (GLA) has called...

The GLA is the Greater London Authority, which reports to and is appointed by the Mayor. The London Assembly has authority to audit and examine both. The Mayor and the London Assembly are both elected. You could say that the London Assembly is part of the GLA, but it's a little misleading.

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djcritchley | 8 years ago
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Excellent quotes from Will Self and Grayson Perry  21

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ianrobo | 8 years ago
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massive civil disobedience in the the UK ha ha

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Simon_MacMichael replied to ianrobo | 8 years ago
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ianrobo wrote:

massive civil disobedience in the the UK ha ha

Well, Critical Mass starts just along the South Bank each month so if it ever does get built, I can see them taking a spin past it ... though maybe not if Lumley's plans include recruiting retired Gurkhas to provide the security  39

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Paul M replied to ianrobo | 8 years ago
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ianrobo wrote:

massive civil disobedience in the the UK ha ha

I take it you weren't around when Thatcher introduced the Poll Tax then?  3

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SteppenHerring | 8 years ago
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Part of me wants them to go ahead and build it just to see the massive civil disobedience. Unless they are going to search everyone going onto it, then arranging a mass picnic should be pretty easy.

But it's a colossal waste of public money - which we're told is short - on a private vanity project.

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bikebot | 8 years ago
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For those that don't know what the London Assembly is for, which is everyone, they're a review body. They have no decision making authority, their role is to question and criticise the Mayor and the GLA.

Unless there are legal irregularities in the process, they can't directly affect any decision, but they do add to the pressure to kill the project.

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hampstead_bandit replied to bikebot | 8 years ago
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bikebot wrote:

For those that don't know what the London Assembly is for, which is everyone, they're a review body. They have no decision making authority, their role is to question and criticise the Mayor and the GLA.

Unless there are legal irregularities in the process, they can't directly affect any decision, but they do add to the pressure to kill the project.

As well as looking at this bridge, perhaps someone should have a good look at the cost of running the London Assembly?

As they have no legal power to block decisions the Mayor makes, why bother having a London Assembly? Seems like a huge waste of tax payers money, at a time we are all facing cutbacks

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bikebot replied to hampstead_bandit | 8 years ago
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hampstead_bandit wrote:
bikebot wrote:

For those that don't know what the London Assembly is for, which is everyone, they're a review body. They have no decision making authority, their role is to question and criticise the Mayor and the GLA.

Unless there are legal irregularities in the process, they can't directly affect any decision, but they do add to the pressure to kill the project.

As well as looking at this bridge, perhaps someone should have a good look at the cost of running the London Assembly?

As they have no legal power to block decisions the Mayor makes, why bother having a London Assembly? Seems like a huge waste of tax payers money, at a time we are all facing cutbacks

At the risk of going very off topic...

When you put a lot of power in one individual (the Mayor), you need another body to hold them to account. Their day to day role is fairly similar to those of select committees at a national level, with powers to investigate and audit. If they do their job, they should save more than they cost.

I don't know how much the LA actually costs, but if you don't have something like that the danger is that the courts fill the political void, and that's never cheap.

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Joeinpoole | 8 years ago
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Excellent! Well done the London Assembly.

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ianrobo | 8 years ago
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Of course we have no proper democracy in this country as the Mayor can do what he likes even if every GLA member signs this.

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