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Home > Awards > Park for Truro (Threemilestone Park & Ride)
Park for Truro
(Threemilestone Park & Ride) |

87.8%
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Whole Project Award
Project Team:
Client: Cornwall
Council
Design: Highways
Design Group, Cornwall Council
Construction: Cormac
The project
Truro has a population of 21,000 and attracts
20,000 workers to the city centre each day. Congestion,
parking capacity, public transport and pollution issues
were identified in the Truro Transport Strategy from
which the Park for Truro scheme was born. The establishment
of the Park for Truro site was one of a package of measures
developed to alleviate pressures on the infrastructure,
accentuated by a predicted population increase of 7,000
in 11 years.
With Cornwall being a very rural county the majority
of people still rely on their cars to get to work, healthcare,
education and leisure. By providing P&R as the final
link into Truro, this scheme aims to ease congestion
and improve air quality in the historic city. P&R
is being carefully targeted at car users in order to
ensure that it doesn’t attract those passengers
currently using other means of public transport.
Park for Truro is a unique car park combining
an excellent and aesthetically pleasing design with
environmentally sustainable construction, without compromising
functionality. The natural landform and ecology were
utilised in the design of this car park, minimising
its environmental impact by retaining hedgerows and
trees and creating new habitat for native fauna. It
is hoped that over time a true biodiversity gain will
be achieved in line with the Government’s PPG9
Nature Conservation (replaced with PPS9 Biodiversity
and Ecological Conservation).
Site layout and design
In stark contrast to what you might expect from
a standard car park, Park for Truro has been designed
to blend with, respect and enhance the existing landscape
and ecology on site, creating an attractive gateway
into Truro. It comprises 1,209 spaces; spaces for disabled
persons and those with children are clearly signposted
and within easy access of the reception building.
Cornwall Council worked with Cornwall Environmental
Consultants Ltd as the masterplanners, landscape architects
and ecologists to develop the site. The design process
looked first to address ecological and landscape issues,
with engineering applied afterwards, reversing the usual
design process. The main aim was to create a best example
of a park and ride design that demonstrates commitment
to:
- respecting the environment
and quality of the Cornish landscape
- designing a community-integrated
park-and-ride facility
- providing for the needs of
pedestrians, cyclists and disabled people
- integrating form and function
and providing a modern design that can inspire future
projects in the South-West and beyond, by working
with the existing landscape to blend in with and protect
as many local species as possible.
Landscape and ecology
Working with the existing contours, the parking
area was shaped to fit the existing landform creating
a bowl-shaped car park with terracing, which minimised
earthworks and the need to transport earth to landfill
sites.
The majority of the existing hedgerows and trees
were protected and retained and these were supplemented
with additional planting that included:
- 1.13 ha of native woodland
and shrub buffer planting
- 2.26 ha of meadow areas
- 0.85 ha new ornamental planting
areas including car park strips and parks
- 2,000 trees
- 30,000 shrubs, many of which
will benefit wildlife
- 65,000 plants, including
herbaceous plants and climbers
Materials and recycling
A number of recycled materials were used on site
to minimise the impact on the environment and this included:
- 18,000 tonnes of road planings
taken from resurfacing schemes in Cornwall re-used
in the construction of the roads on site
- 500 tonnes of crushed glass
used, instead of quarried sand
- 4.5 km of pipe laid on site
was made from recycled plastics
- 1.8 km of recycled plastic
kerbs were used in place of traditional concrete kerbs
- 15,000 m2 of ecoblock parking
bays made from recycled plastics were used instead
of tarmac surfacing.
The Amenity Building
The building has also been designed and built
to minimise its environmental impact in terms of both
its construction and energy needs and has been equipped
with the following sustainable features:
- Solar panels to generate electricity
and provide hot water
- Heat from underground sources
- Rainwater is harvested for
use in flushing toilets
- A reed-bed filtration system
is used to purify waste water from the building before
it is discharged into watercourses
- SUDS are used for surface
water drainage, including two open storage ponds to
improve habitat.
The site includes a number of features to enhance
its attractiveness for passengers, such as seating,
recycle bins and a boardwalk feature through the site.
Buses
Park for Truro uses Mercedes Citaro buses that
have the latest Euro V low emission engines used in
public transport vehicles, which mean that additives
are injected into the exhaust to convert harmful gases
into the harmless substances nitrogen and water. The
scheme is trialling the next generation of enhanced
environmentally friendly vehicles (EEV) in Cornwall.
The EEV model is the first of its kind in the South-West
and in tests against the Euro V model the EEV version
emits:
- 80% less CO
- zero hydrocarbon emissions
- 25% less NOx, and
- 91% less particulate matter.
Usage of the site
Since opening on 4th August 2008, Park for Truro
park and ride has carried over 208,000 passengers during
its first nine months, which has far execeeded expectations.
This has resulted in an estimated reduction of 118,000
car trips into the city.
Further Information: www.parkfortruro.org.uk
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