Caution urged by local stakeholders on plans for six new park and rides in Oxfordshire
A county council study has recommended six sites for new park and rides
Plans move forward for new and expanded park and ride locations across Oxfordshire while a £51 million site sits unused but critics argue the scheme could create pressure on surrounding areas from the increased capacity.
A county council study has recommended six sites for new park and rides, the swift start of operation at the Eynsham facility and expanded capacity at existing locations.
The A4074 corridor at Land South of Grenoble Road and Cumnor Hill could both receive new sites with around 600 parking spaces.
The new Cumnor Hill facility would be in part to mitigate Seacourt Park and Ride flooding.
A new 1,100-space service was recommended for Oxford Airport, in part alleviating a reduction in capacity at Peartree Park and Ride.
Berinsfield, Golden Ball and Lodge Hill are also being considered for āadditional or alternativeā park and ride capacity.
The report recommends that the Eynsham Park and Ride ābegins operating in the short termā, adding that āthe council is working with bus operators to operate the park and ride as soon as practicable and safe to do soā.
Eynsham was completed in 2024 and its operation, two years on, relies on the building of an āaccess junctionā which is awaiting planning permission.
It is expected to open by the start of 2027.
In a scrutiny committee meeting on April 22, strategic transport manager at the council, Ben Smith, said its park and ride policy, including potential for new sites, is āunder reviewā.
This has received support from Coalition for Healthy Streets and Active Travel co-chair, Robin Tucker, but he has called for further analysis.
He noted that Oxford has the longest operating park and ride in the country, Redbridge, which opened in 1973.
Mr Tucker said: āPark and ride was one of the first tools that Oxford used to tackle its traffic problems, and we support them in general.
āBefore they are expanded, weād like to see analysis of journeys to see if itās better to improve complete bus routes to tackle more of the journey and help the thousands of people with no car.
āThis should also include improving access to bus routes, so people can walk, wheel or cycle to the bus, which is part of the countyās mobility hub plan.ā
He noted ānone of this works if the cityās roads are congestedā and he praised the congestion charge scheme.
Park and rides have received congestion charge-raised funds, with the county council offering free park and ride bus journeys in Oxford until May 31.
Decisions are to be made on the future of this scheme, with potential for free NHS worker and teacher travel paid for by charges on drivers in the city.
County and city councillor David Henwood (Independent Oxford Alliance), āwelcomedā a new park and ride but questioned whether new 600-space sites would deliver ācomparable benefitsā to existing larger park and rides with between 850 ā 1,300 parking capacity.
He said: āCouncil officers have suggested that the reduced scale is intentional, aiming to encourage āmodal changeā away from private car use and towards alternatives such as cycling.
āHowever, this ambition sits uneasily alongside wider trends.ā
He referred to the potential Grenoble Road location as a āpocket park and rideā or a smaller cousin, āTiny Timā site.
Mr Henwood noted: āThe reduced capacity of the new site may increase pressure on surrounding areas, including Blackbird Leys, Sandford and Littlemore, particularly if demand exceeds supply.
āNearby amenities such as The Vue leisure centre already attract significant visitor numbers, and any displacement of parking could have knock-on effects for residents and businesses.ā
He added concerns about car parks being built on green belt land, saying his party would āfavour a hybrid solution that makes better use of existing brownfield sitesā partnering with āmajor local employersā for public parking on āunderutilised areas of their sitesā.
Ian Loader, chairman of Cyclox, thinks the proposals would make a difference for cyclists.
He said: āSafe and inclusive cycling in Oxford requires reducing levels of motor traffic in the city.
āOnly by doing this can we create space for dedicated cycle lanes and redesign dangerous junctions.
āPark and rides are a vital tool in achieving traffic reduction.ā
County Councillor Hao Du (Reform) stated: ā Fundamentally, park and ride must not be treated as a substitute for proper road infrastructure for motorists.ā
He said that for many people, including tradespeople with tools, shift workers, parents on the school run and shift workers, āpark and ride simply isnāt a practical optionā
Mr Du added: āTheir needs are real and they cannot be designed out of the transport network.ā
While he does not oppose the expansion of facilities, he āwould urge caution against treating expansion as an automatic priorityā and wants transparency on a cost-benefit case.
The call for transparency has also been made over the non-operational Eynsham site.
In January of this year, county councillor Liam Walker (Conservative) marked the second year of the siteās construction with cake.
He said the project has become a ācomplete embarrassment for the Liberal Democrat administration at County Hallā.
Mr Walker added: āMillions of pounds have been spent on a site that people simply cannot get to, and that failure sits squarely with their political choices.ā
He has stated that while the site remains empty, £10,000 is being spent on security and maintenance every month, equating to hundreds of thousands of pounds over the last close to two and a half years.
A spokesperson for the local authority stated that proposed park and ride sites at Cumnor, Grenoble Road, Lodge Hill and Oxford Airport have been allocated for in district local plans, adding that āa new park and ride site at Berinsfield or Golden Balls could provide additional or alternative park and ride capacity in the longer termā.
They said: āIncreasing park and ride capacity by delivering new sites, as well as improving facilities at existing park and rides, supports more sustainable growth and the councilās policies to reduce congestion and improve connectivity by public transport, walking and cycling.
āMore detailed technical work would be required, and implementation of new sites will likely be subject to securing planning permission as well as required funding. The council will work with partners and stakeholders to help take proposals forward.ā
On Eynsham, the spokesperson said while the park and ride and A40 improvements were āoriginally planned to be delivered togetherā this was not financially possible and āto avoid further cost inflationā the site was built without funds for the connecting junction.
They added: āFunding has now been secured from Homes England for the A40 Eynsham Park and Ride to Wolvercote scheme, which will connect the site to the A40, provide new bus lanes and improve active travel infrastructure.ā