By New Year we hope there will be a new all-weather walk by the orchard. Together with the new pedestrian span of Cow Bridge, this will give a pleasant circular stroll across the Lea and back via the filter beds.
|
The path follows the
desire line near the bench |
|
MUG committee member, and designer, Harry Hewat researched a low-impact method which allows the path to run unobtrusively among the big waterside trees. The surface will be gravel chosen to look as natural as possible.
The committee has been working with council officers on this project
since April (background here), when the group
decided (minutes here) it would like a path, so long as the route, width and surface are right for the orchard area.
|
Worn ground shows where people like to walk behind the thicket |
|
The walk will link to
the footbridge |
The original council proposal took a line through the middle of this space, since it had to steer clear of trees because the proposed building method would have damaged the roots. MUG’s proposed alternative involves a plastic grid laid on a shallow base and filled with a gravel mix. So far, it has satisfied the requirements of both LBH Parks tree officers, for tree root protection, and of LBH Streetscene engineers for a practicable method for council contractors.
Funding is from Transport for London’s annual sustainable transport allocation to Hackney, so it’s not using any of the park’s own project funds. We explained LBH’s reasons for wanting to get on with the project in our April posting, and although it’s not MUG’s highest priority, it seemed sensible to take the opportunity.
|
Harry puts MUG’s ideas to a site meeting involving Streetscene,
parks tree officers, and our park development officer |
By engaging with the council on this, the committee has also been able to negotiate a council commitment to redesigning the walking/cycling shared use arrangement on the Black Path, something that MUG called for in 2008 but which was shelved during the master plan consultations. If it came to a choice, the group might prefer to spend TfL’s money on that, but it seems that both projects can be afforded from this year’s money.