Skip to main content

Birmingham steers towards car restrictions

By Adam Hill January 15, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Trams are already in operation in Birmingham city centre

The UK city of Birmingham is proposing to restrict private car access to its centre as part of a wide-ranging blueprint to improve the way people move around.

The Birmingham Transport Plan 2031 “describes what the city needs to do differently to meet the demands of the future” and offers ideas to “support the delivery of a high quality, sustainable public transport system fit for all users”.

Banning motorists from central areas has become increasingly popular in cities worldwide.

Birmingham’s plan is designed to reduce transport’s impact on the environment in line with its commitment to becoming a carbon neutral city by 2030. Other intentions include eliminating road danger, “particularly in residential areas”, revitalising the city centre and local centres and reconnecting communities “by prioritising people over cars”.

Chief among the document’s eye-catching proposals is to limit access to the city centre for private cars “with no through trips”. Developments in alternative modes of transit will give people more travel options, it says. “Parking will be used as a means to manage demand for travel by car through availability, pricing and restrictions.”

The document points to a “period of managed transformation during which decreasing dependence on private motor car travel is matched by increasing accessibility to attractive alternatives – for example through wholesale improvements to walking and cycling infrastructure, through investment in new, mass transit services and through emerging technologies”.

The draft document will go to consultation before a final version is adopted by Birmingham City Council. The city will host the Commonwealth Games in 2022.

Related Content

  • Autumn budget: EV charging infrastructure fund and higher tax rates for diesel vehicles
    November 23, 2017
    Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond has announced a £400m ($532m) charging infrastructure fund for electric vehicles (EVs), an extra £100m ($133m) investment in Plug-In-Car Grant, and a £40m ($53m) in charging R&D in the UK’s Autumn Budget 2017. He added that laws need to be clarified so that motorists who charge their EVs at work will not face a benefit-in-kind charge from next year.
  • Middle East Looks to road charging for congestion relief
    January 26, 2012
    On the eve of the Gulf Traffic show in Dubai, ITS Arab secretary general and Innova Consulting managing director Zeina Nazer reviews prospects for road user charging in the Middle East and North Africa
  • Building back better after Covid-19
    February 17, 2021
    The Canadian Urban Transit Association has looked carefully at what’s required to put public transportation on a firm footing post-Covid: here are a few of the group’s recommendations…
  • Progress towards a pan-European cooperative infrastructure
    July 17, 2012
    Kallistratos Dionelis, General Secretary of ASECAP, makes the case for a lightly regulated, staged progression towards a pan-European cooperative infrastructure environment, the achievement of which should look to engender cooperation between the public and private sectors. Such an approach, he says, is the only real path to success.