Farnham was declared an Air Quality Management Area in 2007 but pollution is rising
The owner of a Farnham bike shop says that the town’s roads are now so clogged with traffic, he has to keep his door closed because of air pollution. Gary Bird, who has been at Hoops Velo for 17 years, described the town centre as “almost like an urban motorway.”
Get Surrey reports that Surrey County Council (SCC), Waverley Borough Council, Farnham Town Council and MP Jeremy Hunt this week announced that a Farnham Project Board was to be set up to tackle the town’s poor air quality.
“There’s a massive opportunity here to increase trying to get people out of their vehicles and to walk or cycle,” said Bird.
The bike shop owner feels the town currently presents “quite a hostile environment for cyclists and pedestrians.
“It’s like the cars dominate the town centre and it’s such a lovely town centre,” he said, adding that dust and traffic pollution has at times been so bad near his East Street store that it has aggravated his asthma.
“Myself and my colleague got so bad in the end we had to have the doors shut every day. We were dusting all the products because it blows in.”
He said: “We need to stop using Farnham town centre as a cut through. The A31 is almost like an urban motorway through the town.”
In 2007, Farnham was declared an Air Quality Management Area. This means that it is an area likely to exceed the national air quality objective for a specific pollutant – in this case nitrogen dioxide (NO2).
Road transport is a major source of NO2 emissions in the UK.
Air quality data from November of last year showed an “alarming rise” in levels of nitrogen dioxide, potentially placing the town in the worst two per cent of areas in the UK.
The Farnham Herald reports that the annual mean concentration of NO2 of around 50 microgrammes per cubic metre was significantly above the EU and UK legal limit of 40 microgrammes per cubic metre and up around 10 from the levels recorded the previous year.
Speaking at the time, local air quality consultant David Harvey advocated reducing traffic to one lane, widening pavements and installing a new cycle lane.
He described the town’s one-way system as, “a hazard to cyclists, a hazard to pedestrians and, because of pollution, a hazard to health.”

Surrey bike shop owner says air pollution now so bad he has to keep his door shut | road.cc
Farnham was declared an Air Quality Management Area in 2007 but pollution is rising The owner of a Farnham bike shop says that the town’s roads are now so clogged with traffic, he has to keep his door closed because of air pollution. Gary Bird, who has been at Hoops Velo for 17 years, described… [Read More]