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We begin by considering witness lists and summaries for group 51. The annex to paper ED1/S2/05/16/1 provides members with the witness lists and summaries for the group. Members will recall that at the committee meeting on 13 September it was agreed that the objectors solely to the proposed amendments for line 1 may give oral evidence on 22 November. Those groups should have submitted their witness lists and summaries by 26 September. Members will note that Transco has withdrawn its objection and that, therefore, the only objection solely to the proposed amendments for line 1 is from Kenmore Capital Edinburgh Ltd.
Members indicated agreement.
The next step is for the witnesses to provide their witness statements by 24 October, and rebuttal witness statements by 11 November.
Members indicated agreement.
Finally, in relation to Mr Mitchell's oral evidence later today, I have agreed to take the questioners for group 35 first and the questioner for group 43 second, followed by group 34 and, where applicable, group 45. Group 33 has chosen not to cross-examine Mr Mitchell on noise and vibration, or indeed Mr McIntosh on property values.
The first witness is Michael Leven, who will address the issue of choice of route for group 43. Ms McCamley?
Good morning. I am not quite sure how to proceed. Do I simply address Mr Leven directly?
You do. You put questions to Mr Leven—we are very keen on questions rather than statements.
Right. So I am not to look at you.
No, he is much more attractive than me.
Dr Leven, could you give us your personal details please?
My name is Michael Robertson Leven. I am an ecologist and environmental planner. My professional qualifications are a BSc in ecology and—although I know that you do not want to hear about planning—a degree in planning; both qualifications are from the University of Edinburgh. I did my doctorate on birds at the University of Hong Kong.
It might be useful at this point if you advised the committee of your relationship to the lady who is sitting on your right.
Ms Milne is my sister and I am here because she asked me to get involved because of my professional area of expertise.
Thank you.
That is correct.
Your evidence is also contained in the subsequent rebuttal statement of the Wester Coates Terrace action group. Is that correct?
It is.
Are there any parts of your evidence or the rebuttal statement that you want to emphasise or clarify, particularly in light of the evidence given by the promoter's witnesses at the previous meetings? I think that you have had the advantage of seeing that evidence.
I have.
That is correct, but it leaves us with the methodological inadequacy and the inadequacy of the ecological surveys, which are what you want to talk about this morning.
That is the main concern.
Will you clarify those points for the committee?
My main concern about the methodology is that the route selection process was one in which there was a series of route options, in relation to which various factors—one of which was environmental impact—were considered to arrive at a preferred route. In my particular area of expertise—ecology—that was done by examining the detailed areas of concern and considering the ecological impact of different routes. Some routes were given a higher score than other routes and the Roseburn corridor received the highest score. That was then given an arbitrary weighting—I will come back to that point—and those aspects were then considered against non-ecological and non-environmental aspects in order to make an overall decision on route selection.
Your main concern is about the way in which the ecological impact was weighted.
The weighting compounds the problems. The first problem was that the route selection process did not compare apples with apples; it compared apples with oranges. That was compounded by the fact that the Scottish transport appraisal guidance, which is very clear about how to go through an assessment process, says nothing about weighting or about ecology being more or less important than cost. The guidance is not designed to make that sort of assessment.
Do you want to tell the committee anything about the ecological survey?
The promoter has dealt in part with the concern about the survey. It was always known that the impact on the Roseburn corridor would be the most important in any evaluation of alternatives for that part of the route. Because it was known that the ecological impact there would be greater, it was not thought necessary to carry out a detailed ecological survey. That is legitimate as far as it goes. However, the problem is what happens when the data are fed into the evaluation process and then into another more weighted process. If you do not know exactly what you have got to start with, how can you put a number next to it that allows you to determine its importance?
I believe that I have asked Dr Leven about all the issues that he wishes to clarify.
Actually, on a minor point, there is still a problem with mitigation. I understand that the promoter has stated that it is happy for the mitigation to be an enforceable requirement. However, because the detailed design has not yet been finalised, the mitigation proposals remain aspirational and merely statements of intent. Even if the committee chose to make the present documents enforceable, that would be impossible in practice because they are aspirational. As a result, we will have to return to the enforceability issue later in the process.
That is clear to me. I have no further questions for Dr Leven.
Dr Leven, have you read Mr Les Buckman's rebuttal to Alison Bourne's witness statement for group 34?
I have, but I do not have it before me.
Did you read his comment in paragraph 2.9, where he says that he carried out a test to find out what would happen if the weightings were taken out of the comparison exercise and found that doing so did not change the result?
Yes.
Does that not affect your view?
No, but it affects my concern about the lack of transparency in the presentation of information. The weightings were included as a statement of fact in the environmental statement, but there was no explanation of why they were used. Obviously, you could change them substantially and arrive at a different result.
Do you accept that environmental impact is only one of several criteria to be taken into account in making a route selection?
Of course.
Have you seen the June 2005 edition of the landscape and habitat management plan?
The latest document that I have seen is revision B of the landscape and habitat management plan for the Roseburn corridor, dated 31 May.
Are you aware that Scottish Natural Heritage has withdrawn its objection?
Yes.
I have no further questions for this witness.
Do committee members have any questions?
Will you comment on Karen Raymond's comment in her rebuttal statement that the landscape and habitat management plan has been fully accepted? The committee received assurances about the plan.
If I understand it correctly, Karen Raymond stated that SNH considered the landscape and habitat management plan to be acceptable. That point is perfectly legitimate, because in principle it is acceptable. The problem is that it is aspirational. The promoter has not yet clarified the amount of land that it will require to construct the tramline, which means that it might need much more land than the plan states. I do not disagree with Ms Raymond if the plan is meant to be a pretty picture of something that we should all aspire to, but I do not think that it is enforceable.
There is a chance that much more land might be needed for a tramline than has been identified.
That is a problem. We cannot be sure how much land will actually be required for the construction process.
However, it must be contained within lines that have already been fixed. Are you suggesting that they might have to go outside those lines?
No, I am not suggesting that. As you know, there is the walkway and cycleway and then there is an area of wild land. Everybody knows that some of that will go. The question is: how much of it will go? That is the problem.
Thank you.
Do committee members have any further questions? Ms McCamley, do you have any follow-up questions for Dr Leven?
I do not.
There being no further questions for Dr Leven, I thank him very much for giving evidence today and for coming all the way from Hong Kong. My committee members wanted to go out to meet you, but there you go; you have had to come to us, which has not made me very popular.
Next time.
The next witness for group 43 is Mrs Odell Milne, who will also address the choice of route.
I did not realise that we would get to Mrs Milne quite so quickly. Mrs Milne, would you give the committee your personal details and the capacity in which you are appearing before it today?
My name is Odell Milne and I am representing Wester Coates Terrace action group in my capacity as a resident of 13 years' standing.
I understand that you are here to give evidence to the committee on the choice of the route for line 1 and that you have already given a written statement to the committee on that matter.
Yes.
Have you attended the hearings at which the promoter's witnesses gave evidence on the choice of route?
Yes.
Do you wish to emphasise or clarify for the committee any points that were made during those hearings?
Yes, I would like to clarify one or two points. First, I would like to remind the committee that most of the promoter's witnesses did not, in fact, rebut my witness statement about route selection. Therefore, we must assume that they agree with its conclusion that there was no thorough consideration of any alternative to the Roseburn corridor between the hotel at Craigleith and Roseburn; and that the choice of the Roseburn corridor does not fulfil the promoter's tram system aspirational objectives or the local transport strategy. The proposed line was justified on grounds of run time and cost, neither of which has been substantiated.
Do you have any comments to make on the importance of finding a route to serve Haymarket?
Yes. The promoter's memorandum states:
What do you think the long-term impact will be?
I would like the committee to consider the long-term impacts because the impact on Wester Coates Terrace of choosing the proposed route over an alternative that has not been considered will be significant and real. If trams become operational along that route, the long-term impacts will include: noise impact that will be sufficient to cause sleep disturbance—we will give evidence about that later today; a vibration impact that may be sufficient to damage our homes, about which we will give evidence later; and a loss of privacy and interference with the peaceful enjoyment of our homes and gardens, about which we have given evidence and will give more. There will be a visual impact as a result of the loss of 63 trees along Wester Coates Terrace alone, 38 of which will be lost permanently and 25 of which will be felled and replanted—they will take 15 years to reach the same maturity. Ms Raymond has admitted that that impact will be significant, particularly for residents further up the street. There will also be a loss of amenity with the loss of the public park or wildlife corridor that we all use—our children use it for playing, cycling and walking safely to school and the nursery school uses it for nature study. Many of us use it for walking dogs and for exercising. The damage to the wildlife corridor has not been given proper weight in considering a route.
Can we stick clearly to route selection? I know what you are saying, but there will be other opportunities to raise those points later on, as I am sure you are aware.
Do you think that the impacts would be less on other routes?
Yes. I do not think—and Ms Raymond admitted—that the impacts would be similar if an on-road route were selected. That is for various reasons, which I must narrate, apropos of my comments about the impact on Wester Coates.
Has the promoter recognised fully the significant impact that will occur on the Roseburn corridor and on Wester Coates Terrace?
The promoter might not have appreciated the impact at the link sifting stage, but it has certainly been brought to the promoter's attention. At the first public meeting in the Assembly Rooms, we advised the promoter about the impact on the Roseburn walkway and our homes. We discussed that with Mr Howell and other representatives of the promoter. The promoter has had every opportunity to consider thoroughly an alternative route to the Roseburn corridor for the stretch between Craigleith and Roseburn, but it has failed to do so.
What would you like the committee to do?
I accept that, sometimes, the needs of the public must outweigh those of individuals, but public needs have not been weighed against those of the individuals who are residents of Wester Coates Terrace. No evidence has been given of adequate consideration of an alternative route that avoids the impacts on Wester Coates Terrace. To conclude that the public need outweighs that of individuals, it is necessary to show proper consideration of an alternative. Moreover, the scheme need not result in a negative environmental impact on anyone. We are not saying that the line should be taken away from us and put somewhere else where the effect on residents would be just as bad. The effect of an on-road alternative on residents would not be as bad. It would serve the public's needs without having the negative impacts that residents along the Roseburn corridor would experience.
My first question was going to be what alternative to the Roseburn corridor you propose for a tram that runs from Granton to Haymarket station. You have plumped for two variants: one would use Belford bridge and one would use Dean bridge. Is that correct?
A route along Murrayfield Road and Corstorphine Road would also go to Haymarket. The promoter, rather than me, is best able to find a route that has the appropriate patronage and suits its purposes.
Am I right in thinking that one of the problems with any route is how it crosses the Water of Leith?
Yes.
Am I also right in thinking that the river can be crossed either at Roseburn, as the promoter proposes, at Belford bridge or at Dean bridge?
Yes.
No one has proposed that the water be crossed at Dean Path.
Do you mean Dean park in Stockbridge?
No, I mean Dean Path in the Dean village.
I am sorry, but I do not know that route.
You mentioned Murrayfield Road as another option. Where would that route cross the Water of Leith?
At Roseburn. The route could go down Murrayfield Road and along Corstorphine Road.
Do you propose that the tram should use the existing road bridge at Roseburn to cross the Water of Leith?
Yes.
I do not think that that option is proposed by any of the objector groups that we are considering at the moment.
The proposal was in our original objection.
However, it is not part of your witness statement, so you are not proposing it formally.
No. As I said, the promoter is best placed to choose an appropriate route.
If the Belford bridge option were adopted, would such a route affect a substantial number of residential areas?
Yes.
From Crewe Road South, would the route need to come up Orchard Brae?
Yes.
However, the access to a number of flats is via Orchard Brae Avenue.
That might be the case.
Might those flats be affected if two tramlines ran up Orchard Brae?
In none of its evidence has the promoter suggested that there would be a problem with accessing properties in Orchard Brae. Furthermore, such a problem would not affect the route that I am talking about, which is the stretch between Roseburn and the hotel at Craigleith.
Would it not? I thought that the route that you proposed and which you mentioned in your evidence-in-chief involved Crewe Road South and Belford bridge.
I have suggested those mechanisms for getting to the hotel at Craigleith, but I have not gone into detailed consideration of the route between Granton and the hotel at Craigleith. I have concentrated only on the stretch between Roseburn and the hotel at Craigleith. Therefore, I am unable to answer questions about the stretch between Granton and the hotel at Craigleith.
Have you applied your mind to the issue of how to get from the hotel at Craigleith to Haymarket station?
The route would need to go via Belford Road, Murrayfield Road or Dean bridge, as we have just talked about.
Would that involve using the Roseburn corridor as far as the hotel and then coming along Queensferry Road?
No, my preference would be for the route to serve the Western general hospital. However, the other witnesses who have given evidence on that stretch would be better able to answer questions about that route.
Do I take it that you are not particularly concerned about how the route gets to either Belford bridge or Dean bridge?
I am concerned that the route serves the promoter's aspirational objectives, which means that it should serve the Western general and colleges and schools along that road. However, I personally have done no investigation into the detailed stretch of that route.
Generally speaking, do you accept that there are technical difficulties with putting a tram across Belford bridge?
I accept that. However, the promoter's witnesses indicated that, if the will exists, such difficulties can be overcome.
Have you thought what such measures might involve? For example, regrading might have an effect on access to domestic properties and on the Dean Gallery, which is a listed building.
I expect that it might be possible to engineer the route around the Dean Gallery, which is a listed building with large car parks, but I do not know as I am not an engineer.
So you would defer to the engineers.
I would defer to the engineers with regard to the ability to get round Dean bridge. I do not say that such a route would necessarily have an impact on access, as I suspect that steps could be taken to deal with access issues.
Would you defer to the engineers in relation to both Belford bridge and Dean bridge?
I would have thought that the engineers would be able to deal with Belford bridge. I would also have thought that car parking spaces, which are the only issue that has been mentioned, could be dealt with adequately in some other way.
If the Dean bridge option was adopted, the tram would need to be routed along Drumsheugh Gardens and Chester Street before it turned into Palmerston Place.
That is one possibility.
What other possibilities are there?
You could go along Queensferry Street and turn right towards Haymarket.
You mean along Melville Street?
Or along Shandwick Place and West Maitland Street.
That would involve a U-turn for the tram somewhere.
Yes.
Would you accept that the west end community council might have something to say about a proposal to run a tram along Drumsheugh Gardens, Chester Street and Palmerston Place?
It is the same level of conservation area as Wester Coates; therefore I think that it would say the same as us.
Do you accept that a tram stop on Palmerston Place would serve Haymarket station less well than the stop at Haymarket station that is proposed by the promoter?
It is not as close, but there are lots of places where the promoter is asking people to walk a considerable distance to a tram stop. It could still adequately serve Haymarket station, and it would better serve the west end of Edinburgh, including Palmerston Place and the shops in Haymarket.
But it would serve Haymarket station less well.
Differently.
In that it is further away and less convenient.
It is further away and less convenient for Haymarket station, but it is much more convenient if you want to go to St Mary's cathedral, Palmerston Place church or the shops in Haymarket.
I take it that St Mary's cathedral is a listed building.
I expect that it is.
Do you have a view on the suitability of Craigleith Road as a route option?
I have no information about Craigleith Road.
Do you accept that while either of the routes over Belford bridge or Dean bridge that you have talked about is physically shorter than the route proposed by the promoter, the run times are likely to be longer?
Could you repeat the question?
In your cross-examination some days ago, you were anxious to make the point to various witnesses that the two routes that you have discussed—along Crewe Road South, Orchard Brae and then either Dean bridge or Belford bridge—are physically shorter than the promoter's route.
As I understand it, yes.
Do you accept that the run times on either of those alternative routes would be longer than that proposed by the promoter.
I do not accept that because, as your witnesses have revealed, no run times whatever have been calculated for the stretch between the Holiday Inn near Craigleith and Haymarket.
Do you think that it is likely that a tram run on-road would have a longer run time than one on a segregated, no-traffic route, such as the Roseburn corridor route?
It is possible, but run time is not the only important consideration. You yourself have said that many considerations are important in selecting a route.
I notice from your statement that you have been resident in your present home for 13 years.
Yes.
When you bought your house, were you aware of the proximity of the former railway line corridor?
We chose it because of the existence of the walkway, the cycleway and the wildlife area.
Did you object to the local plan that protected the Roseburn corridor for a light, rapid transit system?
No, I did not.
Do committee members have questions?
I have two questions for Mrs Milne. Could you comment on intermodality, or integration of different forms of transport, with regard to Haymarket station? I do not know whether you are aware of the National Audit Office report that is mentioned by Barry Cross in his rebuttal of your statement.
Are you referring to the National Audit Office report's suggestion that trams should go to places that people want to go to, such as schools and colleges?
No. I am talking about the need, at national policy level, to ensure that all forms of transport meet at key places—such as Haymarket station—so that bus routes, tram routes and railway routes are integrated. Would you comment on that?
Whichever part of Haymarket people reach, the services would be integrated, because people can get buses at the end of Haymarket that is closest to Princes Street in just the same way as they can get them at Haymarket station. Haymarket as a whole would benefit from not having trams going through it, because buses would not be held up by trams.
The point that I am driving at is that in other places—such as Zurich—the buses, trains and trams integrate at one point. That benefits commuters. Can you comment on that issue?
Most of the commuters could walk the very short distance to get a tram. If you are asking whether it is better to have it right on the spot, it is possible that having the tram stop right at Haymarket is a better location.
Aileen Grant raises another point, which relates to Mr Thomson's points about the fact that those matters have been covered in a number of City of Edinburgh Council plans. Aileen Grant states in her rebuttal statement that
We have excluded further discussion on planning because, as you point out, we have quite a bit of evidence on it.
I will make a more general point. A variety of plans have safeguarded the corridor. In the course of all those plans going through, have you objected to the fact that the corridor should be protected?
First, the stretch between Craigleith hotel and Roseburn is not set aside for a tram in the local plan.
Is it a transport corridor?
It is a transport corridor, and in my view it is fulfilling its purpose as a transport corridor. It is a walkway and cycleway; the promoter sets those up as being important parts of transport provision.
The corridor is identified for light rail purposes in all the plans.
That does not mean that whether it should be used for light rail purposes is not a proper consideration.
A lot of effort seems to have been put into assessing the Belford Road and Dean bridge routes. Can you indicate what the traffic levels are on those stretches?
Belford Road is probably less busy but I am not a traffic management expert, so I cannot really comment. I presume that the promoter could divert traffic to give the tram priority at those locations.
Mr Thomson made the point to you that although the proposed route is shorter, tram run times could well be longer, given the impact of bends and traffic. Is that a fair consideration?
It might be, but it should not necessarily outweigh all the other detrimental impacts that use of the Roseburn corridor will have. It might be decided that a small loss of time for people coming from Granton into Edinburgh is less important than the environmental impacts on the Roseburn corridor for both the wildlife and the residents along the corridor.
If your proposal were to become an amendment and it was put to the public to see whether there were objections, have you any feel for the level of objection that could come from people in the areas that would be affected?
I will put it this way. If the promoter had wanted to put a tram in front of my house, I can say in all honesty—I am on oath—that I would not have objected. I am objecting because the promoter is putting the line behind my house and destroying the walkway and cycleway. I cannot comment on what other people would do.
As committee members have no further questions, does Ms McCamley have any follow-up questions for Ms Milne?
I have no follow-up questions. Ms Milne took care of herself.
I am sure that she is more than capable of doing that. I thank Ms Milne for giving evidence. If she and Dr Leven wish to leave, they can feel free to do so.
Thank you, madam. I want only to say that, as far as the promoter is concerned, the cost matter is dealt with in the statements of Neil Harper and Karen Raymond. Neil Harper says that the cost of the mitigation measures have been taken into consideration and Karen Raymond addresses the adequacy of the mitigation measures. I rely on their evidence to rebut Mr Raynal's evidence.
Thank you, Mr Thomson.
We hope that Mr Raynal will be able to appear later in the day.
I am afraid that we have moved on from that item. No indication of that was made to the clerks before we started and we have a full agenda, so I intend to press on. Had we been advised at the start of the day, we might have been able to accommodate the request, but we were not. I am conscious that we have a variety of objectors coming to see us at various times. We are clear that we cannot adjust our timetable to meet other people's commitments. This is a parliamentary committee and we expect people to be made available to us when that is useful to our agenda. My decision is final and I intend to press on.
I simply make an observation to the public and the committee in respect of the rebuttal by the promoter, which suggests that the costings are based on defined mitigation measures. That is in line with Mr Harper's submission, but earlier we heard a statement that suggested that mitigation can hardly be defined until the final design is approved. That is my observation. I would leave the mitigation question open at this point.
The committee will reflect on that point in due course. Now that you have made your comments public, we move on the next witness, Kristina Woolnough, who will address the issue of the alternative route for groups 33, 34 and 45. First, she will address the issue of the alternative route for group 33.
May I ask a question? The promoter's rebuttals to the groups are similar, but one is numbered and the others are not. The points of reference in our questions use the rebuttal to group 33, which is numbered. Is it possible to use that as the points of reference in questions on group 34 as well?
I am happy for that to happen. It is most unusual for witnesses to ask the convener such a question, but given that you regularly swap seats, Ms Woolnough, I will overlook the matter.
Thank you.
I start with Mr Oldfield's rebuttal regarding the footway and cycleway. Section 3.3 of his rebuttal of your statement contends that the route selection sifting process is adequate. Do you have any comment to make on that with regard to the alternative alignments that have been put forward by objectors?
Our view is that, as we heard from Mrs Milne, the weighting process disadvantaged the Roseburn corridor. It also gave an unduly negative impact to the on-road alignments, for a host of reasons. We are not comfortable with the way in which the weightings were done. We are also upset that accessibility and integration were not included as part of the STAG criteria. We think that they should have been key components and that, had they been used, on-road alignments would have come out more favourably. It should also be noted that our proposed Crewe Road South to Orchard Brae link came out higher than any of the Roseburn corridor links, so we are keen for that to be revisited.
Section 3.9 of the same rebuttal states that the existing structures along the Roseburn corridor are considered all right for trams. Do you have any comment on that?
As emerged from the cross-examination that I undertook last week with the witnesses for the promoter, it is clear that the bridges and tunnels—of which there are at least nine and we think probably 11—have not been structurally assessed. Therefore, their suitability cannot be assessed until a much more detailed stage. Again, we come to the issue of technical difficulty and whether, technically, the tramline can be implemented. When we asked about that last week, the situation was not clear—all we have is a professional's opinion. I have all due respect for professionals, but we are just ordinary people and our difficulty is that the professionals were given the remit of getting people quickly from the waterfront and Granton to Haymarket and the city centre and, on that basis, issues such as accessibility, integration and serving hospitals were not given due concern.
Sections 3.14 to 3.18 of Mr Oldfield's rebuttal refer to the use of the Roseburn corridor by cyclists and give some details about the promoter's survey. Do you have any comment on those figures?
Mott MacDonald undertook the survey that is described. Unfortunately, it was done only during the morning peak on a weekday. When we undertook our survey—which, I presume, was what prompted the promoter to do its survey—we did so on a weekday and on a Saturday. Other groups along the proposed alignment carried out surveys on a Sunday and another weekday. The surveys confirmed that there is a recreational function on weekdays and at the weekend. The fact that the promoter used the morning peak and then averaged out the figure is not acceptable. Our figures demonstrate consistent usage throughout the day by walkers and cyclists.
In section 3.16, the promoter's witness asserts:
Our survey demonstrated the exact opposite of that—it showed that people value it for being a traffic-free, pleasant green corridor and that a large number of cyclists are amenity users. The assumption that the route is just used by commuting cyclists who do not care about the amenity is extremely wrong, according to the evidence that we gleaned from our survey. The promoter's survey was just a head count; we carried out a survey of the values that users placed on the corridor.
In section 3.17, the promoter's witness suggests that the cycleway and walkway
Another document that we lodged with the committee is a council document called the "Cycle Friendly Design Guide", which describes non-segregated urban routes as having a desirable minimum width of 4m, for shared cycle and pedestrian walkways. It describes an absolute minimum of 2.5m. For segregated routes, the document requires 2m for cyclists and 2m for pedestrians. We think that, because the promoter is the City of Edinburgh Council, it should live up to its highest standards, not its lowest standards.
In the same section, the promoter suggests that tram lighting will create a much safer environment. Do you have any comment on that?
First, there is no evidence to support that. Secondly, there is lighting on the walkway, although the council fairly consistently fails to maintain it. Thirdly, there is a view that lighting makes people feel more vulnerable. For example, a lone woman who is walking her dog in the dusk or twilight feels that she has places to shelter if she feels threatened. If there are lights lighting her movement all the way along, she can feel more insecure. I suggest, therefore, that the promoter's view is a subjective view and, as I said, there is no evidence to support it.
In section 3.9, the promoter states that pedestrians and cyclists will still have full access to the route. What are your thoughts on that?
The promoter has, throughout, played down the human amenity value—the linear park aspect—of the cycleway and walkway and how they connect different communities in a traffic-free setting. Access to something and the amenity usage of it are not the same. We feel very upset about the disparaging way in which the corridor is continually described as disused and derelict. We feel that the promoter has deliberately and consciously played down the impact that the tramline will have on human and wildlife users of the corridor. Access is a box to be ticked; the amenity box is less easily ticked, and we would like that to be properly considered. We are not aware that any audit has been undertaken of the open green space in our area. Our community is not being offered any compensatory green space. We have raised all those issues again and again, but none of them has been addressed.
In section 3.20 of its rebuttal statement, the promoter states:
Again, we are not at all sure what that means. We are not sure whether there will be barriers between the tram track and the cycleway and walkway. For two and a half years, we have asked whether there will be barriers, and we have been told that the matter will be referred to Her Majesty's railway inspectorate. There must be a commonsense judgment on the issue. If the promoter is assuming fast speeds—which is the justification for using the Roseburn corridor—there must be an assumption of a barrier that will properly segregate people from the tram track. We have asked for a speed restriction, as we want the open aspect of the whole corridor to be retained.
In section 3.21 of the rebuttal, the promoter describes policy T7. Am I allowed to ask questions about that, convener?
It concerns planning; therefore, I would rather that you did not.
In section 3.23 of the rebuttal, the promoter implies that it is acceptable to have trams running fast next to people. I ask Kristina Woolnough what her thoughts are on that.
Again, a commonsense judgment would say that that cannot be so. We are told repeatedly that trams operate on line of sight and that it is necessary to have an off-road alignment for speed of journey and to prevent congestion. We would contend that unpredictable human congestion by way of pedestrians and cyclists, wildlife congestion by way of badgers and four-footed congestion by way of dogs will impact on journey time. The promoter must know whether it has made an assumption that there will be total segregation. We do not think that it will be possible to have the proposed speeds in the constrained area of the Roseburn corridor, where visibility is not particularly good, as the tunnels and bridges cannot be seen through. We want to get a straight answer on that.
I have a few questions about vegetation. In paragraph 3.14 of Mr Oldfield's rebuttal, he suggests that the Roseburn corridor is the most direct route for serving key areas of patronage. Do you have any comments on that?
It is clear that it is not the most direct route for that purpose. One need only look at a map and compare the alternative alignments that some of the groups have proposed to see that there are much more direct on-street alignments, which would be shorter than the Roseburn corridor route and would serve key areas of patronage such as the Western general hospital, schools, businesses in the Haymarket area and so on.
In paragraph 3.16 of the same rebuttal statement, Mr Oldfield suggests that the promoter's route will
I do not know whether it is a deliberate tactic to disparage the Roseburn corridor and to suggest that it will be improved as a result of trams travelling along it at speeds of 43.5mph, but a commonsense view would say that that could not possibly improve the corridor's urban wildlife qualities. Although the function of the wildlife corridor may be retained, its role as a foraging ground and human amenity and its ability to provide access for wildlife will be interfered with. How could putting traffic in the wildlife corridor possibly improve an environment that is currently traffic free, of which there are very few in a busy city such as Edinburgh?
Am I right in saying that the findings of the friends of the Roseburn urban wildlife corridor association survey confirmed the points that you have just made?
That is absolutely right. We took the trouble to survey people, the vast majority of whom were regular users, and ask them for their views. The results of our survey, which we have lodged with the Parliament, reveal that 96 per cent of respondents felt that trees, wildlife and tranquillity were important aspects of the cycle path and walkway and that 98.5 per cent of them rated safety, absence of traffic and accessibility as important. Our survey demonstrated that the corridor has a very wide user profile, which includes the elderly, the infirm, children, people who use it as an amenity for walking their dog and people who use it for getting to work. It is truly a human corridor. Only someone who has experienced the corridor regularly would appreciate the loss that we are facing.
I understand that you are appearing as a witness for group 33. Does that mean that you support Alison Bourne's proposed alignment along Craigleith Road?
My understanding is that I am appearing as a witness for group 33 to speak about the rebuttals, the inadequacy of the assessment of alternative routes and the wildlife and human amenity aspects of the footpath and cycleway. Last week, Alison Bourne spoke about her Craigleith option and about service of the Western general. I am here to speak about the rebuttals that group 33 received as they relate to wildlife and the Roseburn corridor.
Do you have a view about the adequacy of the Craigleith Road option?
That was answered last week. Mrs Bourne made the point that the objectors, who are not experts, were fairly late in the day faced with the difficulty of having to devise alternative alignments. I assure the committee that on many occasions we attempted, through community liaison groups, to discuss alternative alignments, to address the issues and to thrash out various points. As I said at last week's meeting, according to the CLGs' remit it was
I am trying to understand your evidence in paragraph 11 in the section of your witness statement, which is entitled:
As I am sure you realise, we submitted—as did your witnesses—similar rebuttals and statements to cover different aspects. The point that you have highlighted is a mistake—it was lifted from the statement that I made for other groups.
So which route to the city centre do you regard as being "more direct" and "more user friendly"?
It would be more appropriate to ask that question when we come to group 34 because I will speak specifically about alternative alignments. With this group, I am due to talk about the inadequacy of the assessment of alternative routes to Roseburn corridor, with reference to the promoter's rebuttals on the wildlife issue.
Similarly, in paragraph 4, you mention expert advice that you took that favoured "the most direct" route. What is that route?
Again, that comment is a mistake. It was taken from the evidence for group 34. I apologise for that.
Does that mean that you do not have a preferred option at the moment?
I am here specifically to discuss the promoter's rebuttals to aspects of my witness statement. I apologise for those two mistakes. In the confusion of the vast amount of paperwork, it is not easy to check everything. My understanding is that I am here to talk about the inadequacy of the assessment of alternative routes as rebutted by Andrew Oldfield, and about the promoter's rebuttals to our witness statement on wildlife in the Roseburn corridor.
I refer you to paragraph 13 of your witness statement for group 33, in which you say:
Yes. It is possible that the statement contains other errors, which I am willing to concede if you wish to go through them all.
I did not wish to be unduly critical. I simply wanted to ensure that I was not missing any points that I ought to be picking up at this stage.
I apologise. However, I should point out that, on a number of occasions, the promoter's witnesses addressed group 33's alternative alignment along with group 34 and other groups when the issue was not relevant. We have all struggled with large amounts of paperwork. I hope that we will be gentle with each other on that matter.
Did the promoter ever suggest that it might be beneficial to carry out a joint survey of use of the Roseburn corridor?
That is not correct. We undertook a survey last December because, after our persistent questions at community liaison group meetings as to whether one had been carried out, it became clear that the promoter had not done so. When the promoter found out that a survey was being carried out in May, its representatives asked whether they could join us; we said that they could. However, because of a misunderstanding we did not meet the two key contacts with whom we had dealt; one was on holiday and the other was not at the relevant meeting. We understood that the promoter felt that its role would be verification rather than involvement. No manpower was offered.
I will, if I may, ask a personal question. How old are your children?
You may ask if you can explain why it is relevant.
It is relevant because I would like to ask you whether you would let children under the age of, say, 10 or 12 play unsupervised on the Roseburn corridor.
My children are seven, nine and 11. They do not play unsupervised on the Roseburn corridor but I regularly take them there on cycle rides. When one is a beginner cyclist, one is obviously very wobbly. We do not have anywhere else to go that is safe. Because the corridor is close to us, we do not have first to drive so that the children can cycle, and we can access the city by bike from there.
Do I take it that you would not allow your nine and 11-year-old children to play there unsupervised?
I am not sure how relevant my parenting skills are to the Edinburgh Tram (Line One) Bill.
I am interested in your attitude to the safety of any children playing there unsupervised.
Children do play there unsupervised.
Do you think that that is a good thing or not?
That is a parenting judgment; it is not a matter for me.
I am wondering whether risks may be lying in wait for children in the undergrowth at the sides, and whether there may be places where children could come to harm if left to play unsupervised. I was not wishing in any way to comment on your parenting skills.
Okay. I understand your question and I will answer you straight. I have on a number of occasions allowed my children to walk and cycle there unsupervised on local journeys to visit friends; and no, I do not think that there is any danger in the undergrowth.
Would you accept that others might take a different view?
Any perceived safety issues do not lie in the Roseburn corridor from Maidencraig all the way up to Roseburn. I am not aware of any incidents to do with the safety of children there or in any other parts of the corridor.
You referred to the survey and you expressed disappointment that it was held during a period when children are on holiday. If the Roseburn corridor is, in fact, a leisure area, are there not likely to be more children around during holidays than during school terms—other than at peak periods?
It is possible that some children would be there during the holidays, although they would obviously not be using it as a route to walk to school, which is the main issue that I was thinking about. However, the survey was from 7 in the morning until 9.30, and that probably would not be when children would be there during the school holidays.
That is interesting and answers my question.
You have described the dichotomy exactly. We cannot understand why the Roseburn corridor—an area that gets more use than the cycleway and walkway at Starbank—is acceptable for the tram when the Trinity end is not.
Ms Woolnough, can you give me some idea of the evidence on which you base your assertion that women prefer to walk in the dark along the Roseburn corridor, rather than in a well-lit area? I am slightly nervous of your comment in that regard.
The evidence was not about walking in the dark; it was about walking in extremely well-lit areas, particularly where there is no visibility down the corridor. My evidence is based on a local park, Ravelston park, where there was no lighting, although floodlighting has been put in. Women dog walkers became very anxious that they would be more visible as they walked through the park into the woods than they had hitherto been. In fact, the floodlighting was location specific, so it did not have the effect of lighting up the whole woods. It is about the feeling that there is nowhere to hide. I have used the Roseburn corridor at night myself, and I feel that I could jump into the undergrowth and hide myself if I needed to. I would be concerned about being between solid structures with lighting on me and nobody around; I would feel very uncomfortable in that case.
Interesting.
I have just one quick question. I am not sure that I can remember the answer to this question, so I hope that you can. Do you remember how long ago the first CLG took place?
I believe that it took place as a result of the council requiring it of TIE, and I think that it must have been in 2003. It was certainly before the bill was introduced to Parliament, but it may have been in early 2004. I do not have a note of it, and I do not think that the remit has a date on it.
Would it be fair to say that the CLGs were going for—
It says on the remit that initial meetings would be held by mid-March 2004.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough. We now move you on to addressing the issue of the alternative alignment on behalf of group 34. Mr Scrimgeour will be questioning.
Could you describe the alternative route that applies to group 34 and the benefits that it would have over the proposed alignment?
The route comes along Crewe Road South at the front of the Western general hospital, goes up Orchard Brae, into Queensferry Road, travels up towards the city centre over the Dean Bridge, into Drumsheugh Gardens and round into Palmerston Place, up to the Haymarket area at the top of Palmerston Place before turning left into Shandwick Place and the west end. One key advantage, from our point of view, is that that route would serve the Western general hospital at the front entrance which, as we heard last week, is supported by Lothian NHS Board. The other key advantage is that it is shorter and more direct and that it serves the Haymarket area at a distance from Haymarket station that is considerably less than the distance from Waverley station to the St Andrew Square stop. It also avoids the Roseburn corridor.
In the rebuttal that Mr Oldfield made to your statement, he referred to that route including a large dog-leg. Do you agree with that assessment?
I believe that that is one of the occasions on which Mr Oldfield's rebuttal incorporated information that he had lodged for group 33 about the Craigleith Road alignment. That is an instance of when there has been confusion and duplication on all sides. The dog-leg is not relevant to our alignment. It is the promoter's Roseburn corridor dog-leg that is the very big dog-leg.
Later in your witness statement you refer to constraints on the Roseburn corridor. I understand that you mean constraints to access, but the rebuttal statement refers to constraints in respect of construction and asserts that there are none. Were you referring to access or to technical construction difficulties?
I was probably referring to both, but access is important. The corridor is a narrow space and the indicative drawings do not explain how the tramline will fit. We are talking about access in terms of amenity compared with our alternative alignment, which has visible on-road accessibility. That must be an improvement on an alignment that cannot be seen and which cannot be easily accessed. I am also concerned that the promoter has described 24 access points as opposed to the current 18. Again, looking at the landscape and habitat management plan, I have not been able to find six new access points, so I am a bit confused about that.
My understanding of the lighting issue is that, if you are in a brightly lit area that is adjacent to an unlit area, when you look from the lit area to the unlit area, you cannot see anything; it is a completely dark space. Would you agree with that?
Yes.
Was that your explanation with regard to the park in question.
Yes.
I have no further questions at this point.
Do I take it that the references that we were looking at a few minutes ago in paragraphs 4 and 11 of the group 33 statement relate to the route alignment that you are now talking about in relation to group 34?
Are you using the group 33 document or the group 34 witness statement?
I am using the group 33 document. I just wondered whether paragraphs 4 and 11—
Do they contain the same points as the group 34 submission? Yes. I would say that those points are relevant.
We are considering the group 34 witness statement rather than the group 33 document.
It was more the substance of the document that I was concerned with.
Yes.
Do you accept that it might be a longer route—although it would be physically shorter—because of the difficulties that we have discussed this morning, such as the amount of on-road running, the interference with on-road traffic and the sharpness of some of the bends?
I am not an expert and we hoped that the promoter would have come up with those kind of figures as part of its rebuttal.
Do you accept that the flows of traffic along Drumsheugh Gardens, Chester Street and Palmerston Place are greater as a result of the central Edinburgh traffic management scheme that is being implemented at the moment?
I cannot say whether that is the case; I am not an expert and did not study the situation before and after. However, it seems to me that that is part of the city centre in which the council wants to discourage the use of cars. Given that the area comprises residential property and office accommodation, I would have thought that a tramline there would be beneficial.
When you talk about your proposed route being "more user-friendly", are you thinking of it being user friendly for people on the tram or for people who live in the houses that the tram will pass?
I am talking about the purpose of a tramline, which is to get people on the trams and to serve key destinations. It should also be visible and accessible.
So you are thinking of visibility and accessibility rather than journey time.
I am also thinking of journey time but, again, the assessments have not been done, so we are only speculating in that regard.
You have heard and read the promoter's evidence that certain options were sifted out at a fairly early stage because they were technically difficult or expensive. Do you accept that that happened?
I do not accept the remit that the experts were given; that is the difficulty. Mr Buckman described the objective in his evidence to us. We do not think that that should have been the objective; the objective should have been to meet public transport needs and reduce existing car use, not to reduce potential future car use, which the promoter's alignment seeks to do. Those of us who live near Queensferry Road would love to see less traffic coming into the city. The brief that the experts were given constrained them. We challenge the brief, not the experts in the way that you imply.
On the dog-leg point, if one looks at the map one can see the difficulty of getting from the top of Orchard Brae to the end of Palmerston Place at West Maitland Street, which, as the crow flies, would be one side of an approximate rectangle. Your proposed route would go round the other three sides, as it would turn left at the top of Orchard Brae and go along part of the Queensferry Road. It would then turn right on to the Dean bridge and right again into Drumsheugh Gardens. In short, your proposed route would go round roughly three sides of something approximating to a rectangle.
But it is a small rectangle. The road configuration along Queensferry Road over the Dean bridge is not a turn, but a curve. I am not an expert, but I think that there is plenty of space. Your witnesses have agreed that the alignment is technically feasible. I accept their judgment, which is good enough for me.
It is technically feasible, but at a cost. You do not have regard to the cost. Is that the position?
We have a little rectangle in comparison with your very large half circle. We do not have an assessment of the cost, so I cannot comment on it.
Do you consider that Haymarket station would be better served by a tram stop on Palmerston Place or by the promoter's proposed tram stop?
We did not specify where there would be tram stops. It is quite possible that a tram stop would be sited round the corner from Palmerston Place. I do not know; I am not an expert. We did not stipulate any stop locations along any of the route.
As a basic proposition, do you accept that proximity to Haymarket station is desirable? In other words, the nearer the stop is to Haymarket station, the better.
I accept the general principle that public transport should be integrated. As I have said, I am not an expert on the subject, so I cannot say how that is done in specific locations. However, if the promoter's method of serving Waverley station is acceptable, why is it not an acceptable method of serving Haymarket? Many objectors find it hard to cope with the fact that the promoter uses one argument in one place and another one somewhere else just to suit its case. I think that objectors have never done that.
One of the arguments that you used earlier was that your proposed stop at Palmerston Place—or on West Maitland Street, east of Palmerston Place—would be nearer to Haymarket station than the proposed St Andrew Square stop is to Waverley station.
Correct.
If there is that distance between the proposed stop at St Andrew Square and Waverley station, is that not all the more reason why a stop at Haymarket should be as near as possible to Haymarket station?
You could argue it the other way around by asking why the stop that comes down on to Princes Street could not be nearer to Waverley station.
Does that mean that you are not going to answer my question?
Could you repeat your question?
If the existing proposed alignment cannot be closer to Waverley station than the proposed St Andrew Square stop is, is that not all the more reason to make the Haymarket stop as near as possible to Haymarket station? We need to bear in mind the fact that a number of trains pass through both stations.
"As near as possible" is a subjective phrase. Depending on the reconfiguration of Haymarket station, there is also a market to be served in the Haymarket area. If a stop were to be made on West Maitland Street, the Edinburgh International Conference Centre and all the businesses to the south or south east could be better served.
But do you accept that the National Audit Office positively encourages easy interchange between heavy rail and tram?
Again, there is no evidence about the stop location that the promoter has chosen. I have to profess to ignorance about that. As I said last week, we could not find the stop location when we were in the library because it is part of the amendment. I would have a job, therefore, in saying that the promoter's stop is better than ours. It happens to be on the same side of the road as the station is, but that does not necessarily make it a better stop in terms of integrating trams and buses.
I presume you accept that the group 34 proposed route, which you have described, involves on-street running and potential conflict with traffic? Given that the route passes through a number of residential areas, do you also accept that access to some of those residential areas may be impaired?
Could you be more specific? The route along Queensferry Road is plenty wide enough. Orchard Brae is also pretty wide. I believe that the access to flats there is either by a separate road alignment or off Queensferry Road.
I ask you to imagine a tram coming up Orchard Brae towards Queensferry Road and to imagine the car drivers who want to access the flats in Orchard Brae Avenue.
The new flats?
Yes. A car driver trying to do that manoeuvre would have to turn right.
Yes, if the car was coming up Orchard Brae.
There is no problem for car drivers who are coming down Orchard Brae, but those who are coming up the road would have to turn right. The driver would have to wait until the road was clear for them to do so; they would have to wait for the oncoming traffic to pass.
They have to do that anyway.
Yes, but if the car had a tram behind it, the tram would be held up.
Yes, but that would happen with the on-street running on the rest of the alignment. Almost all the alignment is on-street. I am sure that, for the rest of the alignment, traffic problems of that sort have been investigated and decisions have been made on them. I do not see why it should suddenly be a problem here.
Is not one of the great advantages of the Roseburn corridor the fact that it would enable trams to move swiftly without conflicting with road traffic?
But they would conflict with pedestrians, wildlife, dogs, cyclists and so on. We are not clear whether there would be a substantial barrier. We are told that that will be decided. Far worse, unpredictable congestion or flow interruption could be caused on the Roseburn corridor than would be caused on-street.
Is it fair to suggest that the West End community council might not be particularly pleased to have the tram following your proposed route?
I am delighted that you asked me that question. I had hoped that you would. The West End community council is heavily involved in community liaison groups already, because the current alignment affects the West End community council area. I imagine that there is nothing new for the community council to deal with.
But it has not objected to the current alignment, has it?
I do not know. All I know is that it participates in the community liaison groups.
Given that we are talking about route selection and access to key traffic generators, how many people might be generated to travel daily by tram from the Western general hospital?
Again, I am not an expert, but we know that the footfall in that area is very high. I know that we are not allowed to talk about patronage, but we are not sure whether the patronage figure for that area was calculated on residential units alone or whether it incorporated other factors. Patronage was calculated at the route-sifting stage and we think that it was calculated on residential units alone. If that is the case, the calculation may not have factored in aspects such as the police station and the hospital.
Do you know what the footfall or patronage might be from Haymarket station?
I do not.
Would you suggest that Haymarket station, which is the third busiest station in Scotland, might have a larger effect on traffic generation than the Western general hospital would have?
If people get off or on at Haymarket station, it is obvious that they have not come with their cars. Therefore, I do not think that there would be any difference in traffic generation—if, by that, you mean car use—between the two locations. Integrating public transport is obviously a desirable aim, but we think that our proposed alignment would achieve that. Mrs Milne described how people flood out of Haymarket station and disperse, then flood back in again at night. They cross the busy Haymarket junction with no qualms, so we think that they would continue to be happy to walk over the road.
I will not rehearse the arguments about intermodal guidelines for movement between heavy rail and light rail. However, having remarked earlier on the promoter's playing up of an argument in one place and not in another, you gave me detailed figures for the Western general hospital but did not give me detailed figures for people getting off heavy rail at Haymarket and moving to light rail. To weigh up the traffic generation possibilities of Haymarket, would you not have to know the intermodal figures?
I need to clarify a couple of matters. First, Mrs Bourne prepared the evidence on the Western general. Secondly, I do not think that we are in disagreement. I agree that there should be intermodal connections at Haymarket station. We think that our proposal would achieve that, as well as serve the Haymarket area.
Members have no further questions. Do you have a question, Mr Scrimgeour?
I think that everything has been covered well, but Kristina Woolnough may want to add something.
You cannot go on a fishing expedition. You must ask specific questions.
I am all fished out.
I thank you for your evidence. I propose a five-minute break to allow Ms Woolnough to move across to the other side of the table. In the meantime, I remind those in the public gallery that they should not talk during evidence taking. Given your personal knowledge of the subject, I know that it must be tempting to contribute to what is going on, but I would rather that you refrained from doing that.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
We will next address the proposed alternative route. Richard Vanhagen will be questioned by Ms Woolnough.
Mr Vanhagen, your proposed route is an alternative that avoids the Roseburn corridor. I presume that you value the Roseburn corridor as the other objector groups along the Roseburn corridor do.
Yes, I do. I agree fully with what has been said today.
You have also chosen an alignment that would serve the Western general hospital. Is that correct?
Yes. We are convinced that the tramline should pass the front door of the Western general hospital.
Your alignment differs slightly from those of other objector groups. In particular, it goes along Belford Road. What is the thinking behind that? Were you comfortable about having to choose an alternative alignment?
Like everybody else, I am not an expert; however, I felt that it was helpful and appropriate to consider an alternative route from the group's point of view. We discussed the matter as a group—I suppose because of the question of mitigation and the adequacy of that—and we considered an alternative route.
Objectors have had to propose alternative alignments although they are not experts—as you say, you have tried to be helpful. Great play has been made of the economy and speed of trams going along the Roseburn wildlife corridor. Do you think that meeting the existing public transport need, which your alignment meets, is more important than meeting the potential needs of the waterfront development?
Yes. The promoter said that it was lacking in radial routes from the waterfront to the city centre, and one can see, from a bird's-eye view, that the Crewe Road South alignment is a direct route—certainly, as far as the top of Orchard Brae and Queensferry Road. Looking at that and seeing the Belford Road possibility, that is why we opted for the alternative alignment. I initially thought that the line was going to run from Granton to Gyle; it was only some time later that the Haymarket issue became clear to me and to the group. We appreciate the interchange with Haymarket station.
And you think that your alignment meets that requirement.
We feel that it does. In one of the rebuttal statements, there is a photograph that is taken from Palmerston Place looking towards Haymarket station, which is clearly visible. That is not our photograph; it is the promoter's photograph. It is very close indeed. One can see Haymarket station as one comes to Palmerston Place and turns the corner.
It is there in front of you.
It feels as if one is actually there. There is no feeling of detachment.
Thank you. That is all that I have to ask Mr Vanhagen.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough. Mr Thomson, do you have any questions?
Thank you, madam.
Yes, there is.
That might be quite an attractive route for a tourist who has alighted from a tram at the Coltbridge viaduct or thereabouts and who wanted to visit the galleries.
It is a signposted route for pedestrians. It is what you would call a tourist route, I suppose.
Would you accept the general proposition that the nearer a tram stop is to Haymarket station, the better it is likely to serve passengers using the station?
I have lived in Edinburgh all my life and have worked for 40 years in the west end. Like Mrs Milne, whose views I endorse entirely, I agree that the commuters spill out there: I was among them as I walked to work every morning. I mingled with those people, and I know that my colleagues' philosophy was that if one worked in the west end, one got off at Haymarket; if one worked in the east end, one got off at Waverley. It is only three minutes more in the train.
If you were designing a tram system to serve a railway station, would you accept the general proposition that the closer the stop is to the station, the better it is likely to serve it?
I agree. That is true.
Thank you.
I made the point last week that the Western general was an accepted distance away and that Haymarket station would seem to have priority over the Western general in that context.
Would you also accept the proposition that if the proposed tram cannot serve Waverley station from closer than a stop in St Andrew Square, that might be all the more reason to have a stop as close as possible to Haymarket station?
Waverley is the hub, and it always will be. I suspect that Haymarket station would have closed many years ago, along with Caledonian station, had it not been on the main line. Haymarket station is not well served with facilities; that is one of its main drawbacks.
As you have already pointed out, it is on the main lines to the west and the north.
It is on the main line, and therefore it has advantages.
Do you accept that your proposed route has certain disadvantages in that it runs for its whole length on road and mixes with other vehicular traffic?
That is an advantage.
Why so?
Because it will be able to absorb the tram traffic. Belford Road has buses, cars and heavy vehicular traffic. It is a busy road, and so is Orchard Brae. They serve the people. That is where the people are going; that is where they go to work and that is where there are businesses. I am absolutely convinced that that is the right route. The Roseburn corridor route connects nowt with nowt, as far as I am concerned.
Do you accept the general proposition that a tram that runs on an ordinary road and mixes with road traffic is likely to run slower than a tram that runs on a dedicated track?
I do not know. I am not an expert, but I would have thought that the most direct on-road route would be the preferred route. If the Roseburn corridor was not there, I imagine that that is the route that we would be talking about today.
Are you aware of the technical difficulties of getting a tram across Belford bridge, given the gradients that are involved?
Yes. I realise that it is not an ideal situation. I believe that, in past times, there has been talk of a span. I have no concrete evidence of that, but I believe that there was a proposal to span the area from the Dean Gallery grounds to the top of Douglas Gardens. I have not mentioned that simply because it is outwith my technical expertise. I am simply a layperson. I am just trying to be helpful.
Thank you, Mr Vanhagen. Thank you, madam, I have no further questions.
Mr Vanhagen, you used the word "commuters" throughout your responses to Mr Thomson's questions about the Haymarket site, but will you comment on the fact that others will use that site as well? If people have the option of switching from the mainline railway station to the tram at an interchange that is designed in a well integrated, intermodal way—perhaps people carrying suitcases or people like myself with two replacement hips—they will welcome the opportunity to alight at Haymarket rather than travelling on to Waverley station.
I doubt that very much, because one of the problems with Haymarket is that it has steps. As I understand it, the platforms are at least 30ft below the road. In fact, the only exit that allowed people to come out at street level—the exit from platform 1 into the car park—has been closed, presumably for security reasons. People have to go down a great number of steps to get to the platforms from the entrance to the station. That is a problem. There are no lifts or escalators. Sometimes, one has to help people who have suitcases or children to get up or down the steps.
Bearing in mind that there are to be improvements to Haymarket station and that the committee visited the station and saw the special access arrangements, will you keep an open mind on the matter? Do you accept that that aspect will be improved and therefore that my point still stands? Somebody who has a mobility impairment or who is carrying luggage is much more likely to alight at Haymarket and access other transport options there.
I do not know about that. You are party to information that I have not seen. I asked the promoter last week whether it had commissioned a study from Network Rail about the integration of the tram and the train at Haymarket, but I got no response to that question. You are telling me something that I do not know. I would welcome improvements to access. However, at the moment, I would say that if I was carrying suitcases and the like I would go to Waverley station. When people phone up for advice they are told that Waverley is the hub and that is where they go.
You allege that your route would take less time than the longer Roseburn route. Do you take encouragement that your view is proved by the fact that that has been shown to be the case at Starbank, where the time that is spent on the road is shorter than that in the wildlife corridor?
I genuinely feel that. With tram priority, the route is the right one. I have no reservations about saying that. It is an on-road route. As I said last week, we are talking about an orbital route—Mr Oldfield uses that phrase—on the Roseburn wildlife corridor. If the route goes there and does not produce what we expect, we are stuck with it. An on-road route would provide a little more flexibility.
Will you compare traffic density on the Belford Road route that you propose with that on the rather narrower and congested Starbank Road?
Starbank Road is not really what I am talking about; that is further down the route.
I am trying to obtain a comparison of traffic.
Crewe Road South is a wide road. The proportions are generous all the way up to Orchard Brae and on to Queensferry Road.
What about Belford Road?
Belford Road is busy. I use it all the time. Buses run on it and it handles the traffic adequately. That is a viable tram route.
Other committee members have no more questions, but I will ask a question to clarify my thinking. Like you, I am not an expert, so I am taken by how firm you are about your route's desirability. Have you seen Mark Bain's rebuttal of your witness statement?
Yes.
Paragraph 3.47 of that rebuttal says that the average gradient from Palmerston Place to Douglas Gardens and to Belford Road is 8.9 per cent. I understand from previous witness statements that Her Majesty's railway inspectorate does not allow a gradient of more than 8 per cent. How would you mitigate that problem?
I have talked about the span that has been suggested from the top of Douglas Gardens to the grounds behind the Dean Gallery. Also, the tram has not been chosen, and we do not know what technical innovations are in progress. After all, none of us would have been talking about bendy buses or guided buses a few years ago. Technology will always bring improvements, so there may well be a tram that could be accommodated on the road, never mind having to go for an engineering solution.
Do you accept that Her Majesty's railway inspectorate would discount the proposal completely, irrespective of what may or may not happen in the future, because of the gradient?
If that is the standard, one would accept that being on the road would require some engineering ingenuity to solve the problem.
But currently it is a bit of a showstopper. Would that be accurate?
It is in the rebuttal. I am a lay person, just the same as you are. We are talking about technical issues and we are out of our depth. I know that there is an engineering solution to practically everything, if we really want it. I am sure that it exists.
Are there any questions from committee members? If not, Ms Woolnough, do you have any follow up questions for Mr Vanhagen?
Just a few. With regard to the gradient, I imagine that you are thinking of some sort of infill or bridging arrangement to remove the gradient.
Yes.
When objectors devised the alternative routes, was it our understanding that the promoter organised the tram's gradient specification, and that it was part of the generic tram brief? I believe that the tram generic spec was changed from a 7.5 per cent gradient to 8 per cent, because of difficulties with the promoter's chosen alignment. Is it your understanding that when we were devising alignments the promoter set the gradient specification for the tram, as opposed to what appears to be related to HMRI?
Yes.
So it is possible that information has evolved, changed or been updated since we devised alignments.
Yes.
With regard to Mr Thomson's point about access to the modern art gallery, which is signposted at the Coltbridge viaduct, is it also the case that there are several tens, if not hundreds, of steps downwards?
There are 82 steps.
I have counted them, but I could not remember.
I regularly run up them, so I can vouch that there are 82. You are out of puff when you get to the top.
Would it be fair to characterise those steps and the possible walkway access to the modern art gallery, which has steps at the other end to get up to the modern art gallery—
I have not counted those, but there are a lot.
It is inaccessible unless you are fairly fit and healthy with no buggy or small children, and the access is fairly rickety, so you would not want to tackle it if you felt at all frail.
It is a tourist route for young, active people.
That does not compare with the access that you hope to provide with your tram stops at the gallery.
We would come to the front door. We are back to the Western general issue—entry to the gallery is by the back door.
And it is only for healthy people who can manage tens of steps.
Yes.
With regard to Haymarket station, the promoter's witnesses last week said variously that their proposed Haymarket Yards stop was 30m or 50m away from the main station. We have never specified where a stop would be in our proposed option, but Palmerston Place is 200m or so away from Haymarket station, so we are talking about a difference of perhaps 150m.
Yes.
Is it also the case that we have no detail of any Haymarket improvements? We do not know how there is going to be integration between the trams or the station, or whether there will be integration.
No.
So discussing integration with Haymarket might be a red herring, since a lot is unknown about Haymarket.
I have seen only one proposal to develop Haymarket, and that was 25 years ago. It was like Centre Point in London. The objectors to that proposal erected a barrage balloon to show the height of the complex sitting on Haymarket station. Out of that, we were going to get escalators and lifts but, fortunately, it never came to anything.
Do you believe that a tram stop on West Maitland Street in particular or Palmerston Place on the objectors' route would be more visible?
Yes. People who would come off the tram would see the station very clearly and would not be in any doubt about where they were.
So people who were coming out of the station would see the tram stop.
Definitely.
Do you think that the promoter has used the Roseburn corridor simply because it is there? Is serving existing public transport needs more important than the promoter's objective?
The weighting of speed and economy on the corridor has been overplayed and we would lose a great amenity asset by meeting the proposal. Our transport needs would be better served by the roads and what exists on the city's trunk routes, on which the tram routes should lie. The trams ought to go where the customers are, and they are on the roads. I do not think that the Roseburn corridor will generate 13 per cent of the scheme's patronage, if that is what Mr Buckman has said. We should not even contemplate running a tram through the Roseburn corridor because of the large residential catchment area there.
Is it fair to say that the objector groups are concerned about emerging information on the trams and that if some bits of the network are not built, the Roseburn corridor will have been sacrificed for nothing?
Yes.
Thank you, Mr Vanhagen.
As there are no further questions, I thank Mr Vanhagen for his evidence. He can now leave the table. Ms Woolnough might or might not like to stay where she is.
Many comments that I wanted to make have already been made this morning. I agree with those comments and share concerns about the impact on the wildlife corridor.
Thank you. I am sure that Mr Thomson will bear that in mind when he questions you.
I wonder whether I could ask a question while the strength is holding out. As I understand it, the group 45 route that you are proposing is the same as the group 34 route, at least so far as it runs along Crewe Road South and up Orchard Brae.
That is correct.
Then it parts company from route 34 and turns right instead of left.
That is correct—on to Queensferry Road.
Then it would turn up Queensferry Terrace. It would not go across Belford bridge, but would turn into the grounds of the Dean Gallery.
That is correct.
Would it join Belford bridge before or after it crosses the Water of Leith?
I am not a technical expert, but the idea was that there would be a bridge crossing there, spanning the Water of Leith and adjacent to the existing Belford bridge, and that that would avoid the gradient issue at the bottom of Palmerston Place.
Do you envisage some sort of earth works within the Dean Gallery property to effect a change of level?
I would imagine that the bridge that I am describing would take off from part of the way down the slope from the Dean Gallery.
So the new bridge would be at a different level from the existing one.
It would be slightly higher, but I am not an expert. The route was proposed in 1947 for a road alignment, so the issue of crossing the Water of Leith has fascinated and caused trouble for city engineers for ever, as far as I can tell.
From Palmerston Place, do you favour the Rosebery Crescent or the Coates Gardens option, or are both of them involved?
We left that open, on the basis that we are not technical experts. The purpose of choosing an on-road alignment was to illustrate that there are ways of serving the Western general and avoiding the Roseburn corridor. There were numerous on-road alignments, but while this one moves away briefly from the west end along Queensferry Road, it does a very tiny dog-leg in comparison with the promoter's route. When one sees all the routes on a map one can see that this route is much shorter—as is group 34's route—than the promoter's route.
What is the purpose of using Rosebery Crescent or Coates Gardens rather than going down to West Maitland Street and turning left there?
To use a phrase of which the promoter is fond, it was illustrative of the fact that there are several different alignments to get to the Haymarket area. It is not a case of one alignment set against another among the objector groups; it was that the alignments are all illustrative of the fact that one can get to the Haymarket area along a route different from that which the promoter is proposing, and with a shorter distance involved.
Would you propose a tram stop on Rosebery Crescent or Coates Gardens, rather than on Haymarket Terrace?
I have no proposals for tram stops. I would leave that to the experts.
But would I be right in thinking that you would see the advantage of having a tram stop there to serve Haymarket station?
The intention is not to acknowledge such an advantage; it is simply to demonstrate another way of getting to the Haymarket area. It is not the case that I was thinking, with my group 45 hat on, "Ooh, we must serve Haymarket station better", or that, for another group, we thought, "That will not serve it so well." We simply wanted to illustrate that there are different ways of getting to the Haymarket area, which avoid the Roseburn corridor. We feel that the promoter should re-examine those alignments. That was the purpose of suggesting them.
Could we save time by agreeing that a lot of the points that I made to you in relation to group 34 with regard to on-road running and the route passing residential areas apply equally to this option?
I would repeat what I have already said, which is that we see a lot of merit in on-road running as opposed to—
I was assuming that.
Well, I will just put it on the record.
Are you recommending to the committee the group 34 proposal or the group 45 proposal that you are presently discussing?
If I am allowed to be so presumptuous, I recommend to the committee that the route alignment choices be re-examined, reappraised and re-investigated to avoid the Roseburn corridor and to ensure that the remit of tramline 1 is to serve existing public transport needs rather than developers on the waterfront. The exact detailed technical specification is a matter for experts, but it depends on the original remit for the tram.
Thank you, Ms Woolnough.
Do committee members have any questions?
When you suggested that there should be a crossing at the Water of Leith beside Belford bridge, you said that it might be at a higher level and then mentioned a road that was proposed in 1947. Have stricter guidelines on the conservation of areas such as the west end of Edinburgh been introduced since then?
I imagine so. However, except for the section along the Granton waterfront, the tramline 1 alignment impacts entirely on conservation areas or world heritage sites. With such guidelines, we are talking about degrees of impact, rather than wholesale impact. There have been many changes since 1947 and, in any case, Patrick Abercrombie's proposal at the time was for a road.
I want to focus on that aspect rather than on wildlife corridors or whatever else. I imagine that the powers that be would oppose the placing of a second bridge at a higher elevation than Belford bridge.
Actually, in that area, there is a modern hotel that I am sure has no heritage value at all. I do not think that a second bridge would impact on views or vistas, but I suppose that that depends on the bridge's design. I would not say that that would necessarily be the case.
So the bridge would be an additional new structure.
Yes. However, we envisage that the bridge will have minimum, if any, impact on built heritage, because it will run diagonally over an existing bridge. If it is well designed, it should not impact on Belford bridge. Indeed, it will be up against a hotel of modern design that could do with being disguised. I would not assume that heritage bodies would take issue with the proposal, because we do not know.
If the committee was minded to lodge an amendment that would place the tramline along the Western general hospital route, what would be your reply to the claim that such a move would delay the bill by 18 months or more and put the whole scheme at risk?
I must interrupt, Mrs Eadie—I seem to interrupt everyone at these meetings. That matter should really be discussed by the committee, not with this witness. It is up to the witness whether she wants to answer, but I have to tell her that the committee will consider the matter in its totality.
I would so love to answer the question. The important thing is to get the project right, even if that involves a delay.
Even if that risks the whole scheme?
Yes, because we should not spend lots of money on the wrong scheme. For reasons that are not clear, it appears to be serving developers at the waterfront, but what happens if they do not build anything there? I understand that the property market is in a bit of jeopardy. A whole set of assumptions has been made; we should do away with those assumptions and concentrate on what we know. We know that people walk and cycle along the Roseburn corridor and that they need to get to the Western general hospital and Edinburgh royal infirmary. We must remember that there is a proposal to move the sick kids hospital to the ERI. People in Edinburgh feel desperate about such issues; in fact, Mrs Eadie herself highlighted the issue of access to hospitals. Why are we unable to address what we know?
As members have no further questions, I invite Ms Woolnough to make some brief closing remarks.
I am silenced. I thank the committee very much, and I apologise if I have come across as a little over-aggressive or over-assertive. The process is quite stressful.
We prefer to describe you as an enthusiast.
Thank you. That is very polite.
There being no further questions for Ms Woolnough, I thank her very much for her evidence.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
Good afternoon. Before we recommence our oral evidence taking, I remind Steve Mitchell that he is under oath and I now invite Tim Blower to take the oath.
I am afraid that we will have to stop the meeting temporarily, while we sort out some problems with the sound system.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
I gather that we are now back in business. You will hear me much more loudly than you did before—how unfortunate for you.
I have no questions in relation to construction but I will have one in respect of operation in due course.
Our questions are limited at this point, but I have some.
We propose to follow the code of construction practice and the obligations therein, which is to minimise the noise as far as we practicably can. There are noise limits that are set at 75dB(A) for the day time. The requirement is to achieve those if we practicably can and to do the best that we possibly can to minimise noise if we cannot, which is what will happen in this case.
Would it be possible, prior to construction, to put mitigation measures that might have been eventual operational mitigation or an additional construction mitigation?
If that is practicable—and it sounds like it might be—that would be one of the considerations in testing the best practicable means.
If you were still not able to reach the limits in the code, would it be practicable to provide temporary alternative accommodation for the people suffering the noise?
I doubt whether that would pass the best-practicable-means test. There have been some cases of relocation for some major engineering projects, including railways. I would not put the example that you have given me in that category, however, primarily because of the duration of the event—which will be quite short—and the extent of the noise levels. The cases in which the best practicable means have included relocation tend to involve night works over a long period of time that affect large numbers of people. I do not believe that any of those tests apply in this case.
The purpose of the question was to draw to your attention the effect over and above the limits that you set. I am simply asking that you give due consideration to the plight of those in Upper Coltbridge Terrace.
The contractor is required to give due consideration. That is why we have written the code. Best practicable means might sound like a fudge factor—people have put that to me—but there is a lot of case law that tests it. It can be onerous for contractors because they have to do everything they can. They can do a lot; we have specified a reduction of 10dB(A) but that is an approximation and they might be able to do better than that. If it is possible to do better than that, City of Edinburgh Council environmental and consumer services department has an obligation to check that the contractor is doing so.
We move to Mr Aitken, who is asking questions on vibration only for group 35.
In your rebuttal of the group 35 vibration report, you talk about the vibration construction management programme, which is to be
First, I got the impression that you were reading something when you said that the results should be made available. Were you quoting me on that point?
Yes. I was reading your rebuttal of the group 35 vibration report, section 3.2.
My rebuttal of—
Dr Irwin's report.
Sorry, bear with me while I find it; I have quite a lot of papers relating to this group.
It is on page 2 of the rebuttal. The question is simple. We would like to see a liaison group, because it is practical and is part of the guidelines of BS 5228.
The reason I am struggling slightly is that as far as I am aware, from having vetted the code of construction practice, it specifically requires compliance with British standard 5228, which is highly relevant in this case.
The liaison group does not seem to be mentioned, so I am asking that it be considered.
I think it will be considered.
In this case, it is important because the local authority is both the promoter of and the jury in the work. It is important that residents feel that they have a contribution to make. Mr Dennison's example is a perfect case.
Page 18 of the code of construction practice says:
I take it that we will be having a residents liaison group.
I am afraid that I do not know the details of that.
I call Lord Marnoch for group 43.
I have no questions.
Thank you.
I have several questions on construction matters, but they also relate to operational issues as they primarily link to the baseline survey.
We are in danger of moving to the next topic. Many operational phase noise guidelines and standards relate to the background conditions, but construction noise standards—certainly for daytime—do not. As you know, the vast majority of the works, certainly in the Roseburn corridor, will be done in daytime. The noise standard guideline, if you like, is set out in "Construction Site Noise: A Guide to Contractors". The document, which was produced in 2000 by the City of Edinburgh Council environmental and consumer services department, sets a limit of 75dB(A). I am happy to give you a copy of the document if you have not had a chance to see it.
Do you accept that residents who live along the Roseburn corridor currently encounter levels of noise from the corridor that are much lower than the 75dB(A) to which you refer?
Of course.
Do you therefore accept that the construction works along the Roseburn corridor will cause a serious disturbance to them?
They will elevate the ambient noise levels considerably. People will be very aware of the construction noise, but the Control of Pollution Act 1974 does not set noise limits. The act recognises that construction noise is a result of construction. It also recognises that construction happens and that it should not be prevented due to noise. In my experience, no project has ever been prevented because of construction noise. There will be some elevated noise levels and I am afraid that some residents will not enjoy that, but we are trying to minimise that disturbance and to achieve the standards that the council has always used. That is what is required of us.
But is it not the case that we are free at this stage to set an appropriate noise level to minimise the disturbance for the residents of the corridor? It may well be that 75dB(A) is not appropriate in this case.
I am not sure that we are completely free to set noise standards. We are not doing anything new. The construction project is taking place in a quiet area—I am happy for you to quote me saying that it is a quiet area. That happens. The noise standards that we use are practicable. There is nothing new about this case. People are affected by construction noise, but it comes and goes. It is transient, which is why it has in my experience never been a reason to stop a project being constructed.
But it is a planning consideration.
It may be a planning consideration, but as I say it has never been one that has overruled a project.
As I understand it, the limit of 75dB(A) was taken from a Department of the Environment publication.
Advisory leaflet 72 is rather old and is out of print. However—perhaps I should have submitted this document to the committee—the document "Construction Site Noise: A Guide to Contractors" is much more recent, as it was produced by City of Edinburgh Council in August 2000. In that short one-page document, the final paragraph on noise limits states:
You will understand that I am at somewhat of a disadvantage in that I have not previously seen that document, which was not quoted in the environmental statement.
It is quoted in the code of construction practice.
But not in the environmental statement.
We do not quote everything that we ever use in environmental statements.
I understand that the environmental statement refers to the DOE advisory leaflet and I had some concern over the way in which that leaflet had been interpreted. That is why I have pursued the point.
I can understand that. Most local authorities, including the City of Edinburgh Council, have adopted that DOE guidance, which I think was published in 1976.
However, does the DOE guidance give two separate standards?
Yes. The City of Edinburgh Council has chosen the 75dB(A) standard.
The council chose the 75dB(A) standard, but that is not necessarily the standard that should apply for the Roseburn corridor. Let me just read what the leaflet says about the two standards:
It may seem that way to you, but it does not seem that way to the council.
I want to make another point about the choice of the 75dB(A) construction noise standard, which you say is referred to in that council guideline. That guideline seems to conflict significantly with the World Health Organisation guidelines for community noise. The levels that the WHO refers to are some 10dB(A), 15dB(A) or even 20dB(A) below the level that you suggest should be accepted by the people of the Roseburn community and others of a similar ilk who live near where tramline 1 is to be situated.
I am sorry, but I am not sure of the question.
Why should we not use the WHO guidelines?
There are a whole load of reasons. First, the WHO does not set standards but offers guidance on health effects. I pointed that out in my evidence, so I will not quote it again. That point is clear.
So despite the WHO's suggestion that individuals will suffer health effects if, for instance, they encounter an LAeq level in excess of 55dB(A) in outdoor areas, we should ignore that guidance and treat 75dB(A) as acceptable?
I do not think that there will be health effects due to construction noise. You will not find that written down. The main reason why there will be no such effects is that construction is short term.
I live in Craigleith Drive. You refer to the enabling works to the Craigleith Drive bridge as being short term. In your estimation, how long will that short-term piece of work take?
It might be better to ask one of the engineers—possibly Scott McIntosh, who is sitting on my right—about that. I would not want you to think that, because the tram might take two or three years to construct, the enabling works could take two or three years. I do not know the engineering detail of the case to which you refer, but even if the works were to last a few months, the noisy activity, which Mr Dennison asked me about earlier, would last for a much shorter period. One day something noisy will be done, but the next day things will be bolted or fixed, which will be much quieter. The length of time involved will probably be a matter of a few months or weeks, but within that there will be quiet spells. There are many reasons why construction noise levels much higher than those accepted for operation are permitted and the guidance that we use daily recognises that.
In table 13.3 in the environmental statement, why do you quote LAeq levels for the enabling works of 84dB(A) in Craigleith Bank and 88dB(A) in Balbirnie Place, for example? I understand that those are average noise levels. Are you saying that, during the enabling works, the average noise levels will be of that order?
We need to be careful when we use the word "average"; I may come back to that later. If we use it in the general sense, the figures represent a 12-hour average. However, I would not use the word "average". The figures are the predicted noise levels over 12 hours. The table to which you refer does not take into account mitigation, so although the levels in Craigleith Bank could be as high as 84dB(A), I believe that they will be much lower than that, with mitigation.
Yes. I must say that what you have just told me gives me some comfort, but none of that is apparent from the accompanying information.
I intervene to remind Mr Clarke that we should be focusing on the rebuttal witness statement and that you should be posing questions. As anything you say is not being said under oath, it will not be considered by the committee.
I hope that there is a section of the environmental statement that makes it clear that those noise levels are worst-case figures; I am sure that there is—it is just that I cannot find it at the moment.
To be fair to you, the title of the table is "Predicted Worst Case Daytime (Facade) Construction Noise Levels".
Thank you.
However, when I read the table and looked at the various figures, my understanding was that those were worst-case levels that would persist throughout the construction period.
I can only apologise if that was your reading of it; that was certainly not what we intended. I hope that I have clarified matters. I suspect that the environmental statement contains an explanation that makes the situation clearer. It may be that you took a worst-case view of the information because you were concerned about the potential noise levels.
That is all the questions that I have on construction.
Do committee members have any questions?
I would just like some reassurance. I accept most of what you say about inevitable construction noise that may at times be very annoying to people. However, these days, European law and the European Court of Human Rights play a big part in everyday life and there can be a tendency for people to go to litigation. I would hate to think that City of Edinburgh Council, or anybody else, would have to defend itself in external courts against charges that noise levels had exceeded the 75dB(A) or 70db(A) levels. Are you content that we are not opening a Pandora's box?
Yes. There is nothing new here; this is not an unusual construction project. In fact, the works on the Roseburn corridor are really quite minor in general terms. Large structures with deep foundations and all sorts of elaborate engineering design will make much more noise than the work on the Roseburn corridor. I work in London and infrastructure work often goes on in close proximity to people.
Any other questions?
I have no more questions.
I thank Mr Mitchell for that first part of his evidence. We now move on to the issue of noise and vibration during the operation of the tram. We will hear the objections of groups 33, 34, 35, 36, 43 and 45.
Mr Mitchell, what comfort should objectors take from the noise and vibration policy?
Overall, the noise and vibration policy will deliver a responsible level of noise and vibration control, consistent with best practice within the industry. The policy will ensure that a fundamentally quiet tram system is built and operated. I expect the policy to result in substantial lengths of noise screens providing substantial noise reductions to a large number of residents along the Roseburn corridor. The policy will also ensure that the system is designed and operated to the best vibration standards that have been adopted across the industry. It will also ensure that disturbance to residents is avoided.
I invite Mr Dennison to ask questions on noise only for group 35.
Mr Mitchell, I have a very large number of questions for you. I fear that we will be under some time pressure so I request that you keep your answers brief.
I am sorry, but I must ask you to repeat that. I was just finding the right document.
Do you agree that, in the environmental statement, the conclusions that are drawn on noise mitigation for the Roseburn corridor are calculated from the predictions of tram-noise impact which, in turn, are relative to noise levels that were set with guidance from available standards?
Yes.
Do you agree that allowing tramline 1 noise limits to be guided by a standard whose noise levels are prohibited for application to a scenario such as tramline 1 would be a legitimate concern for Parliament, the public and residents of the Roseburn corridor?
I am sorry, but that is a very long written question. Perhaps you could repeat it.
Do you agree that allowing tramline 1 noise limits to be guided by a standard whose noise levels are prohibited for application to a scenario such as tramline 1 would be a legitimate concern for Parliament, the public and residents of the Roseburn corridor?
I think that I understand the question. I do not think they are prohibitive.
The question is whether you agree that such a prohibited application would be cause for concern.
I really do not understand the question. I am sorry. Could you rephrase it for me?
I will move on, and we will return to that question.
Yes—I think that it was based on guidance from PAN 56.
Do you have a copy of PAN 56 with you?
Yes.
I invite you to turn to paragraph 52. As the committee may be aware, PAN 56 presents all its guidance on noise levels in annex 1, which is entitled "Noise exposure categories for dwellings". Could you please read to us the first sentence of paragraph 52?
I would like to put the matter in context.
Can you answer the question?
I am going to answer the question. Paragraph 52 of PAN 56 is under the heading, "Residential Development and Transport Noise". The section above that talks about noise exposure categories for new housing. I can paraphrase paragraph 52 to save time.
Please read the first sentence of paragraph 52.
The sentence reads:
I put it to you that a new tramline passing through mature housing—the Roseburn corridor—is precisely that reverse situation: a situation that disallows the noise levels of PAN 56 to be used as credible guidance.
The paragraph that I have just read says that we should not use noise exposure categories in the reverse situation, so I have not used noise exposure categories, of which there are four categories—A, B, C and D—that relate to increasing levels of noise.
Eighty-two decibels—
I assume that you picked up the threshold—
Excuse me, Mr Mitchell. Eighty-two decibels is—
Applied at the bottom of—
Can I make a suggestion, Mr Dennison? We are not going to get anywhere if we all talk over one another. It might be helpful to know where you are going with this. Although I appreciate forensic questioning, it would be helpful if the committee knew what your end point was going to be.
Certainly. I was misunderstood by Mr Mitchell earlier. I tried to highlight the fact that we believe that the values on which the environmental statement has been based have been taken as guidance from a standard that is prohibited for application to a development such as tramline 1. We are concerned about that misuse. It is like a stack of cards: if a set of noise levels is created and then, in turn, the decisions about the tram's impacts and the mitigation proposals are based on that, the whole hierarchy is based on the values that have been set at the base of that triangle. The question relates to the fact that the maximum or peak noise level of 82dB is taken from PAN 56, the purpose of which is to advise on existing noise sources for new housing developments. Clearly, tramline 1 is the reverse situation of a new noise source for existing residential areas.
Why not pose the wider question, Mr Dennison—as you have just done to the committee—and see what Mr Mitchell says?
I think that I have the gist of the question, convener and I am afraid that I have to correct Mr Dennison. PAN 56 is not only about new housing; in fact, only about one quarter of it is to do with new housing. It contains an awful lot of other guidance and, if we look just at the table of contents, we find that the "Noisy Development" section runs for about a third of the document.
I agree with you, but—
The noise exposure categories make recommendations for new housing, but an awful lot of guidance is not just for new housing. You cannot say that PAN 56 is not relevant to a tramline, Mr Dennison.
I agree.
I think that you did say just that.
No. PAN 56 as a document can be used as guidance, but the noise levels within it, which are presented in the noise exposure categories, cannot be used as credible guidance. I ask you to read the last sentence of paragraph 52.
Again, this is paragraph 52, which comes under the heading "Residential Development and Transport Noise". It states:
I put it to you again that, in taking guidance on noise levels from a prohibited standard, the resulting predictions on tram-noise impact and noise mitigation for the Roseburn corridor were based on a false premise.
The standard is not prohibited. I think that I now understand your first question. PAN 56 is—
I am not saying that the standard is prohibited, but —
You just did.
But that the noise—
Gentlemen. This evidence taking is for the benefit of the committee; it is not a private discussion. If you pose a question, Mr Dennison, I expect Mr Mitchell to answer it. I also expect you not to interrupt each other. I am the only person who gets to interrupt people. I take it that that is understood. Excellent: do proceed, gentlemen.
The planning guidance is not prohibited. The noise exposure categories, if you like, are prohibited. I have not used them.
The values that were taken into the environmental statement are that if
No, I do not think that it does.
The opinion of our experts, who are sitting behind me, is that that is a misuse of the standard, which is extraordinarily clear on—
We need a question, Mr Dennison.
The question? I put it to you, Mr Mitchell, that, in taking guidance on noise levels from a prohibited standard, the resulting predictions of tram-noise impact and noise mitigation for the Roseburn corridor were based on a false premise.
The standard is not prohibitive.
I asked you to read the first and last sentences from paragraph 52, in both of which the word "prohibitive" is expressly used. The use in reverse situations is also disallowed.
The question that you read to me did not mention noise exposure categories, did it? It mentioned just the standard. The standard is not prohibitive. I have not used noise exposure categories.
If I can, I will return to my question. I put it to you that, in taking guidance on noise levels from a prohibited standard—okay, so that should have read "taking prohibited noise levels from a standard"—the resulting predictions of tram-noise impact and the noise mitigation for the Roseburn corridor were based on a false premise.
I suggest that we should move on once Mr Mitchell has answered the question, Mr Dennison. The committee absolutely gets the point that you are making. We will study the Official Report of the meeting.
Excellent.
I call Mr Mitchell.
The answer is no.
Fine. Let us move on now, Mr Dennison.
I am very happy to talk about sleep disturbance, should Mr Dennison want to investigate further the 82dB number that we are talking about. That may be more helpful to the committee. I am sorry; that was not a question.
Mr Mitchell, are you surprised that the use of prohibited numbers from PAN 56 in the creation of an environmental statement for a new tram system that will pass through mature residential areas was not identified by peer review?
I did not hear the last part of the question—I am sorry, there was a noise. I think that I do not agree, however.
The question did not require agreement. Are you surprised that misuse of the PAN 56 noise levels in creating an environmental statement for a new tram system passing through a mature residential area was not identified by peer review?
Am I surprised that the peer review did not identify it?
Yes.
I do not think that it had anything to identify; it was not a misuse because I did not use a prohibitive standard.
I think that the committee has already noted that this is the subject of a disagreement between our experts and you, so the committee will resolve the issue. I stand by what I said earlier.
Mr Dennison, I remind you that you are asking questions. You are not making statements. You are not under oath, so the committee will disregard statements. You will have an opportunity later to make statements under oath that will carry a great deal more weight than they do at the moment. It would therefore be helpful if you asked questions.
I apologise to the committee. The subject is complicated and it is difficult to develop concise questions. Please bear with me.
It is, but let me take you back to something that you raised in a question to me. Did you know that the company that did the peer review had been retained by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in England—
Are you asking me questions?
Mr Mitchell, I excluded Mr Dennison's comment about the peer review. I chose to exercise some flexibility. I am not going to be so flexible with you. Could you answer his question please?
I just answered it.
Do you agree that the environmental statement records the current measured ambient noise level to the rear of Garscube Terrace and Coltbridge Terrace as 35dB, and that it proposed a night-time noise threshold of 45dB?
Yes it does. However, you should be slightly careful because those thresholds are associated with different time periods. To be technically correct, the 35dB was measured to represent a noise level for one hour late in the evening or early in the morning. The 45dB value to which you referred is an eight-hour average.
Right. We will return to that point a little later. I invite you to turn to the environmental statement; I presume that you have a copy.
Yes.
Could you go to section 13.5.2 please?
Could you give me a page number?
Page 211. Will you read the first sentence of page 211?
The sentence reads:
So, taking the Roseburn corridor as an example, if the predicted tram noise is 44dB, or one decibel below the proposed night-time threshold of 45dB, what would the impact be?
There would be no impact.
With reference to the final bullet point of that section at the top of page 211, if the noise level that you predict for the same location is just 2dB higher at 46dB, that would be 11dB above the measured ambient noise of the Roseburn corridor. What would the impact be?
It would be slight.
The final bullet point says that if it is greater than 10dB—
I am answering your question. I am not quoting a bullet point.
Please—I am discussing the environmental statement. It is the severity of impact according to the final bullet point.
No, in the case you just gave me—
I am asking you about the environmental statement. How does it describe the impact?
I have answered your question.
You have not.
Let us not get frustrated about this. Mr Mitchell, would you like to repeat your answer or give your answer.
The impact would be slight.
The final bullet in that table at the top of page 211 says that an increase greater than 10dB is regarded as a severe impact.
Yes but the section leading to that says
Can I make a suggestion? I am trying to follow your questioning in relation to the rebuttal statement. Your case is supposed to be based on areas of disagreement and dissent, which should be outlined in the rebuttal statement, so it would be helpful for us if you could refer, in part, to it.
The subject comes under sections 5.5 and 5.6 of Steve Mitchell's statement. It is simply to do with the calculation of the degree of mitigation. According to my reading, and to that of the experts who are sitting behind me, there seems to be a variety of controls on the calculation, which in certain circumstances—in the Roseburn corridor—will produce a no-impact situation. However, with just a minor rise of just 2dB, we would progress straight to a severe impact.
I think we understand. Your witnesses will, of course, be able to give evidence on the matter in considerable detail at the appropriate point.
Okay, but that is not really the point. The issue for us is that we have no confidence in such a method, which has such widely varying results.
It might interest you to know that, at the preliminary stage, the committee considered the documents to be an adequate basis for assessment. We did not drill down into the specific detail as you have clearly done, but we consider the documents and, you may assume, the methodology that underpins them to be sufficient for us to make our decision at the end of the bill scrutiny process. Do carry on. However, I ask you to address your points to your rebuttal. That would be helpful.
I will try to close on this point. The methods that are being proposed for calculating the mitigation cause us major concern. I certainly cannot follow them and I do not believe that our experts can, either. I will ask you to quote another couple of sections for me. Could you please go to section 5.5 of your witness statement?
Do you mean my main witness statement, rather than my rebuttal?
Yes. I ask you to read out section 5.5.
It says:
If you could now please read section 7.6.
It says:
On one page, you say that the baseline levels must be known; on another page you say that
Let me try to answer that in a helpful sense, rather than simply by quoting verbatim different sections of my own statement. It is important to know the baseline noise levels in order to assess the impact of the tram. That is in the environmental assessment. If it transpires that the baseline levels are low, it becomes important whether or not the level is above the threshold value. If it is below the threshold, tram noise is low enough to say that there will not be an impact. It does not actually matter what the baseline is. When mitigation is being decided on, it is not necessary to know the baseline in detail. To assess the impact, it is necessary to know the baseline.
You read out a section that says:
Absolutely. We would need to know the ambient noise levels, so that we know whether it is the threshold or the change in the baseline that is the determining factor. I know the baseline noise levels along the Roseburn corridor. It transpires that the thresholds are the critical factor in this methodology, which I have not invented myself. You obviously think that the methodology is wrong.
I do.
It is a methodology that I have used on three tram schemes that have gone to public inquiries, and which have been scrutinised by planning inspectors and been found to be acceptable. I am not allowed to mention the peer review, which also found them acceptable.
I appreciate that it is difficult to put arithmetic across in such a forum but, according to the method that you propose, a value of 44dB has no impact but a value of 46dB has a severe impact. That bypasses any assessment that there would be slight impact, moderate impact and substantial impact on the way, and we do not accept that.
I want to answer the question because it is an important point. You are not quoting the environmental statement or my evidence. If you read the environmental statement and the case that you are talking about—which is Garscube Terrace, l believe—you will see that the impact at reference 3d in table 13.5 is not severe. The environmental assessment does not say that the impact is severe. If you have misunderstood the methodology, I apologise for its not being written more clearly, but I do not want you to misquote the environmental statement.
I have not misquoted it. You quoted the environmental statement earlier. It says:
No. You are jumping from one paragraph to three or four bullet points in a paragraph further down. If you follow the whole flow—
I have. It is actually a single paragraph with some bullet points.
Yes, but you did not read the rest of the paragraph. For an impact to be severe the change in ambient noise must be greater than 10dB and the level must be above the threshold. In other words, the level must be in the zone in which noise affects people and the increase must be at least 10dB. That is a severe impact. In this case, the tram noise is below the threshold so it is not a severe impact. It is below the threshold at which tram noise has an impact so there cannot be an impact, regardless of the change in baseline.
As residents, our concern is that, if we do the arithmetic according to the environmental statement, a deviation of 2dB can jump us from no impact to severe impact, bypassing slight impact, moderate impact and so on. That just does not make sense to us
I am afraid that you have misunderstood the methodology.
It is about 40 words. I cannot—
Mr Dennison, the committee will consider the matter carefully. I think we have got the message on this one. Mr Mitchell has answered the question at least twice.
I move on to section 3.14 of Steve Mitchell's rebuttal.
Sorry, my rebuttal of whose statement?
Your rebuttal of our statement.
I think I have done four or five rebuttals for group 35.
I refer to the one on the technical report.
To Bernadette McKell?
Yes.
That is because I am drawing on guidance that is relevant to the project. I did not make up my own guidance.
I think you are referring to the fact that a standardisation is being pushed through the industry for an eight hour night-time period, but that represents a period, not necessarily that measurements should be accrued over that period.
We have done the assessment. We looked at two time periods: the hour until when the tram will run at night—half past midnight—and the hour when it will start in the morning. In those periods, we looked at how people might perceive the change in noise. I do not think that one would average noise over eight hours if one was assessing whether it had changed. One would do that over a shorter period, such as one hour. When we talk about the thresholds and whether the noise level from the tram will be high enough to have an impact, we are drawing on recognised guidelines that use an eight-hour standard. Again, that is the standard that has been widely used in lots of other projects.
Again, I think that the eight-hour standard refers to the period but not necessarily to the measurement. If you mix operational hours and non-operational hours, as you have done, you dilute the result from the operational hours.
I do not think so. The standard eight hours is used to assess a great deal of noise that comes and goes. Aircraft noise, for example, often operates late at night and early in the morning. There is no rule that says that it has to be noise that operates continuously through an eight-hour period.
Common sense suggests that mixing operational hours with quiet hours will dilute the effects of the operational hours.
Common sense may say that, but my work is based on guidelines and standards that are drawn from more than 40 years of research into the effects of noise on people. The research was based on some very large social surveys. Often, many thousands of people have been asked whether noise bothers them. My work is based on guidelines that have been drawn from such research, which has shown over many years that the eight-hour value is a good indicator of annoyance and disturbance.
The eight-hour value is a period and not necessarily an instruction to measure—
Mr Dennison—I think we get it.
Okay, fine. Chapter 13.5.3 of the environmental statement says:
I have not used creative arithmetic; I have used the noise metrics in recognised standards.
Then we disagree.
If I were to use four and a half hours LAeq, I would be making it up. I am using eight hours LAeq because I have guidance and the social research of many years to help me to interpret eight hours LAeq. That is why I have used it.
Does the committee understand that mixing operational and non-operational hours does not meet with common sense?
The committee has understood the point that you are making. However, we will decide in due course what weight to attach to particular bits of evidence. It was simply that you did not need to repeat the same question in a different way: we understood your point.
Excellent. My next question concerns our rebuttal of Steve Mitchell's witness statement, section 7.19. You claim that the figures that limit the noise of trams should not be made a statutory part of the bill for fear that the tram system might be illegal if it were to exceed those figures. Is that the case?
That is the gist of the paragraph.
It seems that you have correctly grasped the point that the tram system must be subject to controls on its operation if we, as residents, are to coexist happily with it. What legal qualifications do you have for your opinion that operators should not be held to such controls by law?
I do not have any legal qualifications; I have never pretended to have any. We have a commitment through the noise policy to operate the tram in a way that meets noise-policy targets. This afternoon, I confirmed that the promoter is happy to refer to that in the bill. We have the noise policy.
You will appreciate that, as householders, we are extremely concerned that the promoter may not be held to noise levels unless they are statutory, particularly given that the promoter may seek to make savings in the presence of a funding shortfall.
I understand that concern, which is why I gave the example of a policy with similar wording that has been highly successful. The Docklands light railway has mitigation works all over it. On the Westway and at Lewisham, track works are done regularly to try to reduce noise. The policy works to control noise and that is what we propose.
I put it to you that if a bill is passed into law that gives the promoter freedom to create new noise pollution close to existing households, it is only right that the same bill should give residents freedom from sleep disturbance.
I am not sure that I agree with that. You have introduced another issue: that of sleep disturbance. I do not believe that the tramline will result in sleep disturbance, given the standards that we have set.
We will come back to that point. I request the committee to take a view on our proposed amendment on the specification for noise, noise monitoring and penalties. We have a deep concern about the monitoring of noise.
I am having difficulty with the questions, as some of them are long and convoluted. I do not know to which standards you are referring. Do you mean the LAeq standards or the maximum levels?
All of them.
Perhaps you could paraphrase the question, to help me.
The WHO standards present considerably lower noise requirements than those in PAN 56, in which certain noise levels are prohibited for use in developments such as tramline 1. If the mantra of the tramline design manual is "Good is not good enough," why are the WHO standards not the preferred ones?
Because the WHO does not set standards.
The WHO presents guidelines. Throughout the environmental statement, you have sought to take guidance from standards, and the WHO community noise guidelines present guidance on the issue.
The WHO tends to report the latest position on research, which is what it did in 1999 and before that in, I think, 1980. Local authorities and Governments decide how to interpret that and set guidelines and standards for their local conditions. Those are the ones that we have used. The WHO findings are at the basis of some of the standards.
You certainly refer to the WHO guidelines in the environmental statement, but, in our opinion, you do not make sufficient reference to them.
You are supposed to be asking questions, Mr Dennison.
Okay.
As the WHO does not set standards, anything that it says about intermittent noise is not particularly relevant.
So railway noise is good?
No, I did not say that it was good; I said that people have got used to it. In fact, a lot of literature shows that people get used to railway noise—this is an important point—more than they do to other kinds of noise, because railway noise is repeatable and predictable. It runs to a schedule. It also has a low rise time, so it is not startling.
I find your thoughts quite incredible, but let me take you back to the WHO, which states that a level 5 to 10dB below continuous night-time exposure shows the intermittent character of noise that has to be taken into account when setting night-time limits for noise exposure. The environmental statement sought to identify a number of standards and guidelines from which you drew your guidance, including the WHO. As I said, I think that you chose not to draw on that guidance on the reduction of 5 to 10dB, because it did not suit your purpose.
I shall interrupt again, Mr Dennison, as I am the only person who can do so. I recognise that question as having been asked in a similar way at least four times already. You might not always get the response that you want from Mr Mitchell, but that is the response that is on the record and we shall reflect on it. I must strongly caution you about the throwaway one-liners. We are at pains to be polite to one another on this committee, no matter how frustrating that might sometimes be. Could you move us on with your questioning?
I would like to complete this point. A further section of the WHO guidance states:
We have paid special attention, in so far as we have measured the baseline noise levels and reported the change in noise level. The environmental statement reports those changes. It then uses the recognised standards that have been used on previous projects with success, in that people have found them appropriate. I do not think that a detailed discussion on that section of the WHO guidance is relevant to setting those standards, because the WHO does not set standards.
You draw your guidelines from a variety of sources, including the WHO, which you cite in the environmental statement.
I do not think that there was a question there.
No, but to keep repeating that the WHO is not setting standards ignores the point that you are using standards and guidelines from which to draw guidance for the environmental statement. The fact that the WHO does not set standards is therefore irrelevant.
It is rather important to recognise that we have PAN 56 as a statement of planning policy, and an important one, that gives us a lot of guidance about noise and creating noise and which takes the research from the WHO report and puts it into the real world. If you used the WHO guidelines in the way that you are suggesting, you could follow Mr Clarke's argument that, during construction, we should not make more than a certain number of decibels, but that simply is not practicable or pragmatic, and no planning authority or Government has ever taken that route. There is a stage between reading the research that the WHO reports and setting real-world standards. That is an important stage and one that I do not think you should ignore.
My committee members advise me that they feel that we have a sufficiency of evidence on that point. Therefore, unless Mr Dennison wants to draw to our attention something new, we will move on.
Certainly. My next question is a long one, so I wonder whether I will manage to achieve it.
You will not.
Can I paraphrase the point that it makes?
Absolutely. I would welcome that.
In his rebuttal, Steve Mitchell talks to our proposal to amend noise averages to 40dB for night-time running and 50dB for daytime running. He says:
I have said that we feel that we have sufficient evidence on the WHO guidelines, so we will pick up that point later. It should be remembered that we have all the statements in writing and that we will consider them. They carry as much weight as the oral evidence that we hear today.
Can I draw your attention to a particular quote?
No. I feel that I have been tremendously flexible. All the members feel that we have sufficient evidence on this matter and that you do not need to elaborate further. I will accept a new point, but will not accept further emphasis of the WHO guidelines.
I will move on.
I somehow doubt it. Under the noise and vibration policy commitments, they would be told whether it was necessary to carry out noisy maintenance activities on the tramway. Experience suggests that that would happen only once in several years. There would be noise disturbance from rail grinding because, with the best will in the world, it is a noisy activity. However, it would happen only occasionally. The only mitigation measure is to forewarn residents, because it would take a matter of a few hours to pass a given property.
I move on to your rebuttal of section 3.9 of our document. For 40 years, the Roseburn corridor has been extraordinarily quiet, but the Caledonian railway set a precedent before then with a low-frequency service that started at 7:30 am and terminated at teatime, and which never ran on a Sunday. Is it not true that there is no precedent for running a transport system in the Roseburn corridor at hours that would disturb people as they prepared for or were awakening from sleep?
It is true that the previous system did not operate at those hours. However, that system used steam trains and I am sure that they are much noisier than trams. I suspect that there was no mitigation for the trains, which is unlike what we propose for the trams. I also suspect that vibration levels are much higher for a steam locomotive than they are for a tram. This is all in my written statement, but you asked the question. However, I accept your point that the tram would operate at different hours from the previous train service.
As I said, those hours are when people are preparing for or awakening from sleep, which is a great concern to us.
I believe that there were tests on using rubber wheels on a French system.
I was asking about steel wheels. Is steel on steel the best-in-class solution for low noise, according to all the available industry studies?
One of the alternatives to steel on steel is rubber wheels. I am aware of tests on the use of rubber wheels in which the results were not good, because noise levels were not significantly lower than those for steel wheels. There were other problems with a rubber-wheel system. Therefore, I do not believe that there are practical alternatives to steel on steel.
Is steel on steel the best-in-class solution, according to all the available industry studies?
What do you mean by "in-class"?
I will remove that element of the question. Is steel on steel the best solution for low noise, according to all the available industry studies?
For a tram system that would run down the Roseburn corridor, I do not think there are proven technologies using other materials.
According to all available industry studies, there is no better solution than steel on steel.
I am not aware of any.
That is the fourth time that you have asked that question, Mr Dennison. Once is fine and, at a stretch, twice may also be fine—but four times is not.
Okay. I will move on to paragraphs 3.56 to 3.58 of Steve Mitchell's rebuttal of the Hamilton and McGregor statement.
Again, I am struggling with the question. The Garscube Terrace section does not need mitigation. According to our assessment method, there would be no significant impact on that section.
Our rebuttal stated that there were numerous inconsistencies in your calculation methodology and many errors in the tables. You have not rebutted any of that, so we must take it that you acknowledge those considerable errors. Therefore, we question whether the calculation for mitigation measures for Garscube Terrace is accurate.
I do not think that I need to change the assessment for Garscube Terrace. I may not have rebutted your statement on that in detail, but I said at the beginning of my witness statement that there was no change to the points that I made in my original statement.
Okay. The main part of my line of questioning has been on methodology, because we question its accuracy. We do not have confidence in the proposed mitigation measures, which are based on numbers sourced from standards with which we do not agree. There are plenty of questions to be asked about the veracity of the environmental study on noise impact.
I suggest that we take a short adjournment, because I need a comfort break and I suspect that others would benefit from one. We will resume with Mr Dennison's final question in three minutes.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
Okay, please resume your seats. Mr Dennison, please continue.
Mr Mitchell, can you confirm that the noise modelling with respect to the properties on Garscube Terrace related to the top floors?
Yes. I have confirmed that in my written evidence.
How many floors do the properties on Garscube Terrace have?
It is either two or three. I am afraid that I do not have that detail because someone else did the modelling for me.
Do you know the receptor heights?
As I say, someone else did the detailed work for me.
So at this point we are unclear as to which floor the modelling was based upon.
No. It was based on the top floor. I checked with the person who did the modelling that he used the top floor. It would be crazy to do the modelling on the ground floor. In fact, I find objectionable the suggestion that I should do it on the ground floor. The first floor—or the second floor, if there is one—is generally the noisiest floor. That is the one that should be considered.
I was just seeking clarification that the top floor was understood to be the second floor.
I have a copy of the Civil Aviation Authority report of December 1992. Is that the one that you mean? It is the original field study.
Does paragraph 3.6 of that report start, "It was acknowledged"?
No. The report has no paragraph 3.6.
Unfortunately, we are speaking at cross-purposes. I will read out the paragraph.
What is the report?
It is the DORA study of night-time aircraft noise.
DORA has done quite a few studies; I used to work for it.
We believe that your statement
It is interesting that the work was undertaken around four United Kingdom airports. I have studied the full report and I know it quite well. Those airports tend to operate in the shoulder hours, which are the first and last parts of the night, so the report is highly relevant.
I agree, but the report says that the one in 75 figure for sleep disturbance does not apply to the shoulder hours.
I am not sure whether it says that. As I said, the report gives the conclusion that you have described. Airports tend to operate in those shoulder hours.
I can only reiterate that the field study—
Question.
The information is on the record.
Absolutely.
That concludes my questions.
That brings me to Mr Aitken, on vibration only, for group 35. I remind all subsequent questioners that if they do not want me to interrupt them, they must ask questions.
We will talk primarily about average and peak vibration.
I am not sure whether we do. You paraphrased a bit of the environmental statement that relates to the construction phase. There is a good reason for what has been described for that. Peaks that can result from what happens on a construction site could damage a building, so it is important to have a peak limit to protect buildings. We have talked about PPV—peak limits—during construction. During the operational phase—
Can I stop you there? I am not talking about construction.
I tried to correct you.
I refer to paragraph 2.5 of your witness statement.
Do you refer to the rebuttal statement?
I refer to Mr Mitchell's witness statement.
It would help if we could follow the argument in the rebuttal statement, because questioning should focus on that.
We have raised the issue in our rebuttal to his witness statement.
Where?
In paragraph 2.5 of our rebuttal of Mr Mitchell's witness statement—we put our rebuttals directly on top of his witness statement.
The introduction to the whole of my witness statement deals with the construction and operational phases.
In terms of tram operational vibration, where is the reference to PPV or velocity?
I do not think that there is one, because that is in section 2.5, under the heading "Acoustic Terminology", which covers both phases.
So you have used it in construction vibration and in relation to operation and construction noise, but you have not used it in operational vibration.
Actually, I have used it in operational vibration, where we discuss—I may need to correct myself—the possible effects on buildings. We talk about PPVs from trams, but we do not use PPVs to deal with the effect of tram noise on people.
We will come on to that in a minute.
Before you answer that, some of the committee are not hearing you, Mr Aitken, so it would be helpful if you were slightly louder.
There are two parts to my answer, Mr Aitken. First, I think that you are referring to the fact that we use the VDV to assess the effect of tram noise on people. To deal with your analogy of the speed of a car peaking at 200mph, the VDV is not a conventional average as people around the table would generally understand it. It is an averaging process that is very heavily biased towards the peaks, so it might not be as misleading as you think to use a VDV average for such a situation.
Yes, of course.
It is not as if one tram could come by and suddenly create something that would be lost in an averaging.
It is interesting that you think that you do not need to include a velocity level for the tram. Paragraph 5.10 of your witness statement details figures that have been taken from the Manchester metro. The first column is velocity, therefore I am surprised that you do not include the velocity figures to create a better picture, given that they are referenced in the Manchester system. In addition, paragraph 13.3 of the environmental statement states:
You should not be surprised. We included the Manchester metro peak values, or PPVs, because we know that people are concerned about building damage from trams. We used them in the operation to deal with that concern.
If you were developing a good, general specification for tram vibration or some other item, would you expect to see VDV supported by maximum velocity, displacement or acceleration? I am talking about a good general specification.
If I was writing a specification?
Yes.
For the design, construction and engineering of a tram system?
Of pretty much anything that relates to vibration.
I might do that if I was writing a specification, but I am not sure that it is relevant to this matter.
If you were writing a good specification, you might include those factors. My point is that I suspect that, as they have not been included in this case, we do not have a good general specification for tram operation. We have it for construction and noise, but not for vibration.
It is quite likely that the specification for the tram will have that requirement because, in my experience, the promoter will want to have some regard to comfort.
Yes, but you chose to use appendix A2 of BS 6472, which pulls out PPV or average levels, and you bypassed section A of that standard, which describes the maximum velocity levels. Is that correct?
I am not sure that I would say that I bypassed section A; I am aware of the whole standard.
You might be intending to write a specification for the contractor that will include maximum levels. It is difficult for me to comment on the process of the engineering works when I do not have sight of all of the relevant documentation.
Could you tell me what part of the witness statement you are referring to?
Yes.
I can answer the question. That specification has not been written but there will be all sorts of contractual requirements to help to guarantee the targets that we have set in the noise policy.
Yes, but those limits are not in the noise policy; that is my point.
No, but there might be all sorts of other things that we put in to guarantee that we reach the noise policy targets. That is a matter for TIE—
Yes, but they are not in the noise policy targets.
That is because they do not need to be.
Gentlemen, private conversations are not allowed; questions and answers are.
That concludes my points on the issue of maximum vibration. Having talked about maximums, I would like to talk about the average vibration value or VDV.
Yes, it is the top of the category in which adverse comments are unlikely, which is the same as the bottom of the category in which adverse comments are possible.
So it is just on that borderline.
It is in the lowest category.
It is on the borderline. It is at the top of the lowest category and the bottom of the middle category.
Yes.
The data in the table are derived from a study on human response to vibration. Are you aware of the source of that study and the background to the numbers in the table?
I am not completely sure. I think that the study might have included railway vibration.
In fact, the numbers come from a study that examined the response to vibration of people who had chosen to live beside railway lines for many years. The railway lines were old and the houses were probably old as well. The study did not reflect the response of people living in residential, vibration-free areas who were being subjected to new railway lines. Therefore, the level that you have selected is one that will probably just fail to get adverse comment from people who choose to live beside long-established railway lines.
As I said, I am not familiar with the detail of the research that went into BS 6472. I know that it includes railway vibration and is, therefore, highly relevant. As to which element came first, I suspect that the railway might have, although I do not know. I have not studied the social survey work that went into the study. However, I know that that is a recognised standard and I have used it many times on tram systems to the satisfaction of promoters and so on.
I have no doubts whatever about the standard that has been used—I am simply pointing out that the introduction to the British standard says that the levels that are given for guidance must be applied with consideration. Therefore, it is helpful to understand where the data come from when the British standard is used.
They may have in the short term, but people get used to noise and vibration. [Interruption.]
I remind people in the public gallery not to interrupt and that they will be asked to leave if they do so. Please continue, Mr Aitken.
Mr Mitchell, you are aware that we dispute the average vibration level that you have chosen and the amount of discretion that has been applied in choosing it. We believe that the vibration will be a considerable intrusion for those who live adjacent to the line. In fact, we understand that the level that is proposed is double the level that was originally proposed for line 2.
I would not question Dr Irwin's qualifications. I have read his documents carefully and noted the points that he has made, but I would counter what he says with my experience of working for promoters of tramways that have routinely used the same standard, which has been found to be acceptable. I am talking about new tramways, not situations in which people have chosen to live next to an existing tramway. The same standard was used for a corridor in Birmingham that is quite similar to the corridor that we are discussing, and it was found to be acceptable.
I do not disagree. The point that I am making is that the British standard is entirely appropriate, but we dispute the discretionary values that have been selected.
My point is that exactly the same value has been used on other projects. Earlier, I referred to the Docklands light railway policy, which has operated for 16 years and uses the same standard, which was introduced in the Lewisham extension. The DLR does not have problems with people complaining about vibration. The standard has worked and has protected people who are exposed to vibration from new railways.
Perhaps we can agree to disagree, although the committee will acknowledge that we believe that we have the best available expert to advise us.
I do not think so. There might have been an oversight on my part, as I have rebutted a lot of evidence, particularly from your group. I think that the same principle applies. The noise and vibration policy that I introduced at the beginning of the afternoon is appropriate and similar to other schemes. I am afraid that I am not a lawyer and cannot give an answer about the statutory limit.
We have discussed the need to include maximum velocity levels and the average vibration level. Our group is extremely concerned that in special cases in which the promoter is not wholly independent of the local authority—or where the fox and the cat are in charge of the chicken coop, as my grandfather would have said—we need extra protection. There is a high risk that, because of the shortage of funds, we may not receive that protection. That is why we are requesting a statutory level.
We have not assessed every house along the corridor and around the route; we have to deal with matters in a more general sense, for practical reasons. We have stated the limits to which we are committed, through the noise and vibration policy, by using any number of track forms that may meet those limits—there are all sorts of track forms around.
Can you tell me where, in all the documentation, I can find the methodology that has been used to assess whether my house will need mitigation?
In the environmental statement, we have—as you said earlier—tabulated some data on vibration levels from a similar tram system.
Which one?
The Manchester system. We refer to those data, which are from a similar tram system. We have assessed the situation in that sense. From that, we are quite confident that we can achieve the British standard using the available track forms. I have lots of other vibration data available to me to help me to make that judgment, on behalf of the promoter, and to commit the promoter to achieving that acceptable standard.
How you are going to make that assessment is not stated in the documentation. You are saying that you are looking at stuff that you have done in Manchester. At what point, when you are designing the tram system, will you decide that you should use a resilient rail?
In the environmental statement, we say that, looking at the Manchester levels, the VDV standard will be achieved at 4m or 5m from the rail. Your property is further than that from the rail, so it will not require a track form of that type to be used.
I was using the phrase "my house" loosely.
In a general sense. Sorry.
Some houses in the Upper Coltbridge area are within that 4m to 6m—I think that that is what you said.
I said 4m to 5m. That is what the environmental statement says.
Am I right in thinking that if a house is less than 5m from the line, you will apply resilient rails?
If that is necessary, once the engineering comes through. For example, the tram speed could be slow at that location, in which case such mitigation may not be necessary. There is more work to do; however, there is a clear commitment that we will achieve the standard, which is the same standard that is used for lots of other systems.
A considerable amount of work has been done on noise, mitigation and so on. However, there seems to be an omission in that no predicted vibration level that would require resilient rails has been made available in the documentation. I am curious. If you decide that you want to use resilient rails because a house is 5m from the line, what would happen if you came to a house that was 5.1m from the line? How will you make the decision about whether resilient rails are to be used, and when will you make that decision?
I am certainly not going to make the decision now. The engineering will develop and evolve. The speeds may change, the alignment may move slightly and that 5.1m may become 5.2m.
But how will you go about that process?
Oh—I see. Well, the noise and vibration policy gives the commitment, and the designers are very aware of that commitment, as I said earlier. They believe that it is reasonable and achievable. It will go through the design process and, ultimately, the contractual requirements and so on. The system will be designed to achieve those standards.
How?
I cannot tell you that because we have not done the detailed design yet. What I can say is that other systems achieve the standard, and it is achievable.
So, whether or not you use resilient rail next to my house, what will happen if the tram exceeds the vibration levels?
I do not think that that will happen, as the design process should avoid that. If it should happen—which I do not expect—we would be in breach of our policy, to which we have given a clear commitment.
Once the trams are running, you will take measurements and say, "Oops, we've made a mistake."
I was referring to what would happen during commissioning.
My expert advises me that it is extremely unlikely that any retrospective mitigation will be applied.
He is absolutely right that it is difficult to dig up a track and relay it. People will try to avoid that. That is precisely why there will be a margin in the design process. If the vibration is anywhere near those limits, a sensible designer, which I am sure that TIE will have, will allow a design margin and put resilient track in to be sure.
Pooling figures from Manchester, which might have completely differently soil conditions, water table levels and rock formations, will not allow you directly to relate distance from the line to vibration levels in Edinburgh. Are you a civil engineer?
No.
Dr Irwin, who is a civil engineer, advises me that it is necessary to take ground propagation measurements.
Question.
That is what happened in Croydon when the tramline was being put in. The people involved there used the same vehicles that were used in Sheffield. They went to Croydon and measured the ground—
Mr Aitken, please ask a question.
Do you consider it necessary to take ground propagation measurements, Mr Mitchell?
Ground propagation is important. However, if we are talking about distances of 4m or 5m, it becomes less important. I share your concern that the Edinburgh tram could produce vibrations that are different from those in Manchester, but I rather hope that it will produce lower levels, because things have moved on quite a bit. It is important that we have committed to the standard, which I have advised is practicable and achievable. I have data from Croydon where the standard has again been achieved; I did not base my findings on the one system that we chose to quote in the environmental statement. I am confident that we can achieve the vibration standard.
The point is that better practice has been applied in other situations and that best practice is not being applied in Edinburgh. It is worth pointing out that distance from the line is not necessarily the determining factor in—
Mr Aitken, comments will be ignored by the committee; questions will not be.
Thank you.
We have not determined the mitigation yet; that is your frustration. However, we have used best practice in setting the standard, and the environmental assessment is perfectly adequate in addressing the issue. The fact remains that tram systems, particularly in Roseburn corridor-type areas, can quite readily be designed to avoid vibration problems. That is why you might not see as much about vibration in the literature as you see about noise. We have had a lot of debate about noise mitigation on the Roseburn corridor, because we have to work hard on it. Light rail and tram systems do not produce enough vibration to cause people problems in the sort of situations that we are talking about. The design is straightforward; it is industry standard, so we do not need to do anything special.
It seems that it is being done in Croydon. Why is it not being done in Edinburgh if it is best practice?
I am sorry, but what is being done in Croydon?
They applied—
You are to answer questions, Mr Mitchell, not to ask them.
I am sorry.
Apology accepted.
We are getting lost.
Indeed.
I will wrap this up.
That was not a question, was it? That was a statement of desire.
Sorry.
That is fine. I just want to be clear that I am not inviting Mr Mitchell to come in again.
Could I—
You can turn it into a question. If you begin, "Do you agree", that would be appropriate.
Do you agree, Mr Mitchell?
I agree that you would like to have access to the monitoring results. The noise and vibration policy talks about the City of Edinburgh Council environmental and consumer services department having access to those monitoring results, and it is highly unlikely that it would withhold them from you.
It is the old fox in charge of the chicken shed story, though.
The council has statutory duties to deal with noise and nuisance. It is unlikely that it would withhold information from you.
I get the sense that my fellow committee members would appreciate the sharing of that information. Does that conclude your questions, Mr Aitken?
Yes.
We move on to Lord Marnoch for group 43.
Mr Mitchell, I will ask you questions only about noise arising from the operation of the trams. I am not concerned about vibration—at least, I am concerned about it, but I will not ask you about it. I would like to make it clear at the outset that we agree about the importance of the noise aspect of the proposals. In that regard, am I right to say that the environmental statement that the promoter had to produce had to cover the issue of noise?
Yes.
Am I right to say that the promoter also had to cover the issue of noise mitigation?
Yes.
Can we agree at the outset that noise mitigation for people in Wester Coates is an essential aspect of the proposal?
Yes. The environmental statement had to report the potential impacts and suggest how—
We are agreed that it is an essential aspect of the proposal.
It had to suggest how they will be mitigated in an outline sense, defining them adequately for the purposes of that statement.
It is essential.
That is an element of it, yes.
Thank you. I intend to ask questions on only two aspects of the matter as disclosed in your various statements. As I understand it—I confess that it is my own fault, but I may not have understood very much of what has already happened this afternoon—I may traverse some of the material that Mr Dennison canvassed with you. However, if I do, I hope that it will be in a rather different context.
It is one of them, yes.
Could that be described for layman's purposes as averaged-out noise over a period?
Some months ago I produced a guide called "What is noise?" It is appendix 1 to my—
Sorry, could you humour me? I am slightly deaf.
I tried to explain what LAeq is to community liaison groups and—
I know that. I read it, but for shorthand purposes I am suggesting that LAeq involves averaging out the impact of noise over a period.
I would say that it involves accumulating the noise level over a period. If we use the word average, it suggests to people a certain type of average with which they are familiar. In my document "What is noise?" I explain that LAeq is not that familiar average. It is an average that is biased towards peaks. That is why it is used for railway noise.
It is an average.
It is a logarithmic average.
With respect, why could you not agree that it is averaged-out noise?
I will use the expression "logarithmic average" if you do not mind.
We can call the averaged-out logarithmic average—to use your expression— LAeq. I am right, I think, that the criteria that you have adopted for acceptable levels of LAeq derive from the levels said to be acceptable for noise exposure category A in planning advice note 56 of 1999.
Those are the same levels, yes.
No. I shall repeat the question. I am right, I think, that the criteria that you put forward derive from that table.
Which table?
If it is a difficult question, perhaps you would refer to page 27 of your statement.
Where is that in the rebuttal statement, because that is what we should be focusing on?
With respect, convener, not entirely so. To understand the context of what is said in the rebuttal statement or anything else, one has got to see what was originally said in the statement.
Committee members are privy to all that information in writing and will give it equal weight. In the guidance prepared by the clerks for all objectors, and indeed for the promoter, it was made clear that the focus of today's oral evidence session would be on the remaining areas of dispute—those contained in the rebuttal witness statements. It would therefore be helpful for us if the focus of attention was on that.
I do not want to get at cross-purposes with you, convener. We do not have to rebut that, because that is what the witness said originally. I can read it to you.
If that is what the witness said and it has not been rebutted, we take that to be agreed.
I am grateful for that clarification, convener, but the witness will not agree that the criteria derive from planning advice note 56. That is critical to me and I would like to quote what he himself has said in his statement. May I do that?
You may do that provided it is in context and brief. Then we can get to the points in the rebuttal statements. I shall allow you that flexibility.
Mr Mitchell, I remind you of what you said in the appendix to your statement on the noise and vibration policy, to which you yourself have referred. You said:
Yes.
So the criteria that you have adopted for LAeq derive, do they not, from noise exposure category A in planning advice note 56?
Well, yes, they do.
I thought that you were doubtful about that. That being agreed, could you now look again at planning advice note 56? As far as those noise exposure categories are concerned, I refer you first to paragraph 50 and then to paragraph 52. Convener, this document was sent to the committee and you have got it.
Yes.
I shall go through paragraph 50 with you first of all. It is headed
Yes.
It goes on:
Yes.
Is not it clear from that alone that noise category A is concerned with just that—applications for residential development on sites already subjected to noise from road, rail and air?
Perhaps I am slightly pre-empting your question. We have used the reference NEC A as the standards that we have adopted, but PAN 56 talks about lots of other things. The appendix is useful; it tells us where those standards come from. What we have not done is use all the other NECs—B, C and D—as it would be inappropriate to do so. We have used the threshold at which you enter the NEC realm. We have used that threshold value to assess tram noise, not the NEC process itself.
Mr Mitchell, I am afraid that I must press you on the issue. I am well aware that PAN 56 covers lots of things. You pointed that out to Mr Dennison. I am equally aware—we have just agreed—that the LAeq levels that you give derive from noise exposure category A, which is set out in PAN 56. I put it to you plump and plain that paragraph 50 makes it clear that the noise exposure categories have nothing to do with what is appropriate for LAeq in what is already a quiet environment. Do you understand the question?
I understand the question and I am endeavouring to answer it. There are four noise exposure categories. We have used as our basis the threshold, which is the point at which you fall out off the noise exposure category realm. There is no specific guidance on noise levels for new railways, which is the situation that we are confronted with today.
I will take a note of that. You say that there is no guidance in PAN 56 for the introduction of railways.
I said that there are no specific noise standards for new railways—
Or new tramways.
There is no strict guidance. Someone such as myself who is confronted with doing an environmental statement must use the available guidance and adopt a standard that we think is appropriate. That is what I have done.
I have to suggest to you that for the reasons that I have given, PAN 56 is not appropriate guidance in this connection.
I hear your point of view. I have looked at all the guidance—
It is not a point of view—it is a question.
Can you allow Mr Mitchell to complete his sentence?
I have looked at all the guidance. That is what I do as an acoustician in environmental noise. I have looked at all the guidance and this is the most appropriate standard that I have managed to find. I am not aware that any of your experts or anyone else has mentioned other guidance that is more relevant. I believe that I have used the most relevant guidance.
You say that it is the best or most relevant guidance that you can find, but it is not expressly in point.
As I say, there is no specific guidance. That is stated all over the place in the evidence.
I have to suggest to you, plump and plain, that paragraph 52 makes it clear that the compilers of PAN 56 had no intention that it should be used in the situation that we are now in. Paragraph 52 states:
That is right. They did not intend the four noise exposure categories to be used in this situation. However, as I say, apart from the standard for noise insulation there are no standards for new railways anywhere in the guidance. As I have explained, the standard for noise insulation is at very much higher noise levels than we expect to occur in this case.
Let us accept your statement that there is no guidance for this situation then let us look at the fact. The fact is that as applied to Wester Coates Terrace the criteria in your noise and vibration policy, which you told Mr Thomson about at the outset, would increase the average noise level, day and night, by about 10dB LAeq.
That is correct.
For the record, that can be found in table 13.5 of the environmental statement and on page 27 of Steve Mitchell's statement.
Yes. That is right.
So without any guidance that expressly refers to this situation and in the face of a statement in the planning advice note that it must not be used in this situation, your noise and vibration policy imposes on the residents of Wester Coates Terrace a LAeq level that they will perceive to be double what they have to put up with at present, day and night.
I have just answered the double question. The noise and vibration standard that we adopted is a tried and tested standard on other tramways. It accepts that noise levels will increase. I have never denied that; I have always been frank—
I would like an answer to my question.
I think that Mr Mitchell is attempting to answer it.
I apologise, convener. I was not aware of that. Have you finished, Mr Mitchell?
I think so.
Well, I would like to know whether you agree that the noise criteria in your noise and vibration policy will impose on the Wester Coates Terrace residents a LAeq level that they will perceive to be double what they have to put up with at present; day and night.
Yes. I believe that I have now answered the question three times.
Next, and lastly, I turn to the matter of sleep disturbance. Can we agree that that is quite an important matter?
Yes. It is an important matter.
Right. And when we are considering the matter of sleep disturbance, it is not the logarithmic averaged-out noise that matters—we can forget all about that; I do not want to talk about it any more, unless you do, Mr Mitchell—but the noise that is caused at the moment the tram passes. Is that correct?
Yes. That is more important.
That is called LAmax.
Yes.
Am I right in saying that your criterion for LAmax is 82dB?
Yes.
Again, in paragraph 5.7 of your statement, you claim that that figure is "derived from"—wait for it—planning advice note 56.
Yes. It is talked about in there.
No. You said that it was "derived from" PAN 56.
Yes.
Where do we find the figure of 82dB in planning advice note 56?
It is certainly in one of the appendices.
If it helps, it is in annex 1, on page 15. That is the only place that I have found it; it is in note vi.
Yes. It is there.
Right.
Yes.
And then we have A, B, C and D. The only reference that we get, unless you can find another, to the magic figure of 82dB is in note vi of annex 1 of the planning advice note. It reads:
sites where individual noise events regularly exceed 82 dB LAmax… more than twice in any hour during this period should be treated as being in NEC C, regardless of the LAeq,8h".
What that means is that a maximum noise level of 80dB or 81dB would be in noise exposure category A. In that case, noise need not be considered a planning matter. In other words, if one were building a new house, which we are not, and the LAmax was 81dB, noise would not be a consideration.
Try 82.
If it were just less than 82dB, it is unlikely that a planning authority would say, "You needn't think about noise" if the noise was loud enough to waken people.
Can we just stick with 82dB? The figure comes from the planning advice note. It says that if one has a LAmax figure of 82dB, one must treat it as a category C case. That is what it says.
Yes. Although that relates to planning permission for a new house.
Yes it does, but I am just asking what category C means. It means that if one is in planning category C, there is a presumption against getting planning permission for a new house unless one can produce proposals to reduce the noise levels, including LAmax.
Of greater than 82dB, yes.
I therefore suggest to you, plump and plain, that the noise level of 82dB, when properly understood from this document, has absolutely nothing to do—I am tempted to use worse words—with what is acceptable for noise disturbance.
I said earlier that I am not lucky enough to have guidance that tells me how much noise to allow from a new railway, apart from the noise insulation regulations in England and Wales—
Do you understand that?
I think that I ought to be able to answer what has been quite a long question from you. I would like to answer it, as we have agreed that sleep disturbance is an important point.
Which page are we on, please?
Do you have the "Design Manual for Roads and Bridges"?
No, and I do not think that we have had any notice of it. I must suggest that it is something totally different from tramlines.
In answering the question, I am trying to use some related guidance.
Madam—
In fairness, allow Mr Mitchell to answer the question. I take your point that you have not had access to the document in question. The committee will apply its own weight to the evidence that it hears today.
I suspect that your experts—
Can I—
Yes, you can question me. Where that will get you, Lord Marnoch, I do not know, but you may try.
All I am questioning this witness about is the proper understanding of planning advice note 56.
Sure. It is my understanding, however, that if the committee and the Parliament pass the bill, that supersedes planning. We should all be mindful of that. Naturally, we wish to be guided by the planning context in which we sit. However, I am quite clear about the effect of passing the bill.
I have been told that the guidance I have used is not completely relevant. I have said that there is no guidance that is completely relevant. I am therefore drawing on another piece of guidance that I think is of relevance, relating to new roads and bridges. It tells us how to assess sleep disturbance. I will not quote it, because you do not have it in front of you. Needless to say, it discusses the 80dB average level and refers to the DORA study—by the department of operational research and analysis of what was then National Air Traffic Services—to which Mr Dennison directed me earlier. It refers to the chances of waking up as 1 in 75 and so on.
Why did you not refer to this "highly relevant" material at an earlier stage?
It is referred to in the annex to the environmental statement. Perhaps I can find the reference.
But not in this context, or in your statement.
With Mr Dennison, we referred to the 1992 sleep disturbance study by National Air Traffic Services—now the Civil Aviation Authority. That is the base document. Lots of planning guidance, including PAN 56 and the "Design Manual for Roads and Bridges", draws on it. I expect that it also applies to other guidance on other structures.
I suggest that you were quite right not to refer to it in your statement. The nature of road noise is inherently different from that of railway noise.
It is different. As I said earlier, in terms of annoyance and, I suspect, sleep disturbance, railway noise is found to be less disturbing because it is repeated and predictable. I believe that habituation to railway noise is greater than that to road traffic noise or to aircraft noise.
Anyway, I want you to be clear as to the question that I was really putting to you, because it is important. I am suggesting to you that the 82dB LAmax, which we find in planning advice note 56, is totally irrelevant to the LAmax figure for sleep disturbance.
No, I think that it is highly relevant, for the reasons that I have just put.
Very well. Is that a matter on which planning consultants could differ?
I have read Mr Mackenzie's evidence, to which I am sure you are referring. It is interesting that in his main statement he suggests that the tram should be limited to 60dB Lmax, but in his rebuttal statement he changes his mind and uses 70dB Lmax.
I inform you that that is a typographical error and should be read as 60dB.
The issue properly belongs to the cross-examination of the gentleman who is being referred to, when he appears as a witness.
I was just quoting another planning consultant, which is what the question was about. I was asked whether experts differ and the answer is that we do.
It is a normal question. I doubt whether Mr Thomson would argue this, but case law shows that an issue that may be relevant to the committee's consideration is that of whether the proper understanding of planning advice note 56 on the limit of 82dB LAmax is a matter on which planning consultants could differ. Do you say that you must be right?
No, people have different opinions. Sleep disturbance is a difficult subject, but it is one that I have studied in depth—I know very well the work that has been done on aircraft noise sleep disturbance.
I will now make a suggestion that may be the basis of evidence that we will lead later. It is important that you get the issue clearly, so I will say it slowly. I suggest that, if we leave aside planning advice note 56—for the reasons that I have given, although you may not agree with them—the correct LAmax figure for sleep disturbance purposes is 60dB at the outside wall of the receiver house, which, with an open-window attenuation of 15dB, would produce an interior LAmax of 45dB. Do you understand the proposition?
I understand your suggestion.
Do you agree with the open-window attenuation of 15dB?
Yes.
In support of the proposition that I have put to you, I will refer you to two documents and one or two facts, and then you will be quit of me. The first document is the World Health Organisation's "Guidelines for Community Noise". You said that that document is not very important because it does not set standards. I will suggest certain matters to you in that regard. Of course the World Health Organisation cannot legislate for standards, because that is a matter for national states, is it not?
Yes.
So we cannot expect the World Health Organisation to produce standards. However, with the vast amount of research that is at its disposal, it can suggest guidance. Is that correct?
Yes, that is what it does.
If there is no national standard or guidance, there is absolutely nothing wrong at all in looking at World Health Organisation guidance, on that premise.
It is worth looking at WHO guidance, but I have also looked at other national guidance.
I am saying that if there was nothing else, it would be perfectly permissible to look at World Health Organisation guidance.
Yes, if there was nothing else, but there is other guidance.
I put my question on that premise.
Yes, the committee has the document.
What does table 1 state about the specific environment of an inside bedroom?
Among other points, it talks about an Lmax of 45dB.
While we have the WHO guidelines in front of us, there is an incidental matter that I want to ask you about. In paragraph 3.11 of your rebuttal statement, you say that that guidance applies only to sensitive people. Do you remember saying that?
I did not say that; I said that because there were large variations in people's sensitivity to sleep disturbance, the WHO was understandably concerned with the most sensitive individuals.
I suggest to you that what you said in paragraph 3.11 of your rebuttal statement about the WHO being concerned with sensitive people is incorrect. In that regard, I want you to look at page xii.
Of which document?
The WHO "Guidelines for Community Noise".
Is that the page that was attached to Mr Mackenzie's rebuttal evidence?
I cannot tell you that, but I can pass the page to you, if you would like me to. [Interruption.] I am told that it is not the page that you mentioned.
You are referring to a new document that I have not seen.
The document is referred to in Mr Mackenzie's rebuttal. I am sure that you are familiar with the WHO guidelines, as you referred to them.
I am familiar with them, but I am not sure that the committee is.
I will make a suggestion. The committee has sufficient evidence on the point that is being made about the WHO guidelines. Unless there is a headline question that you want to ask, I think—
There are two points that I want to deal with. The first is the suggestion that the WHO guidelines are concerned with sensitive people; with the greatest respect, that has not been dealt with. Page xii of the guidelines states:
I think that it is necessary to read the whole document to understand the point.
I have done so.
I have done so, too. I have also read many other things and, on that basis, I have a good understanding of sleep disturbance.
Page xiv of the WHO document states:
I have just read my paragraph 3.11 and I think that it is understandable that the WHO would take a cautious approach in its guidelines.
I am suggesting that, when one reads the document, one finds that the WHO does not take a cautious approach.
The WHO would be being highly irresponsible if it were not cautious. It seeks to give guidance on the onset of health effects.
The next document to which I wish to refer you is a new document—the British Standard code of practice BS 8233:1999—which is referred to plump and plain in Mr Mackenzie's rebuttal statement.
I am afraid that I do not have that document in front of me.
Did you not read a reference to it in Mr Mackenzie's rebuttal statement?
Yes, I did.
Did you not have a look at it then?
Yes, I did.
Did you not think that it might be useful to bring it along with you?
No, I did not.
I would quite like an answer to my question. Did you not think that it might be useful to bring it along with you?
The whole of the British Standard?
Why not?
I have many documents with me, but that one is not in my bag.
Do you have it now?
I have the appendix, which consists of page 19 of BS 8233:1999.
Would you please read out the footnote for bedrooms that appears in table 5?
The note states:
I shall return to that in a second.
No, it is not coincidence. The reason is that BS 8233 provides guidance on noise levels for new buildings. For new buildings, we would take a cautious approach and ensure that the design took account of a most sensitive person who is not habituated to noise, such as a visitor who lives in a very peaceful spot. That is a very conservative approach to design. Indeed, I think that the very name of the standard shows that it is to do with designing new buildings.
I am grateful to you for saying that, because that takes me to my first fact. You say that BS 8233 is not applicable because it applies only to new buildings. Is that right?
Yes.
Am I right in thinking that most local authorities insist on the same figure—45dB LAmax, as derived from BS 8233—for all new buildings?
For a new building that is to be designed to a good standard, one would choose BS 8233—bearing in mind all the factors that I mention in my rebuttal statement—as the standard for internal noise levels.
I would like an answer to my question. Am I not correct in thinking that, for new buildings, most local authorities insist on that figure?
Yes, they tend to do so.
Is the City of Edinburgh Council such an authority?
Yes, of course.
Please, if you will, attend to this next question. Did you yourself not rely on BS 8233 in dealing with the objection to the bill from the chartered accountants institute of Scotland?
Pardon me. Do you mean the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland?
Yes.
I may have referred to it for offices and things, yes.
But you were not dealing with new buildings in that context.
That is true, but I did not refer to the standard in the context of sleep disturbance.
I am afraid that I will need to chase you on that. These questions may be unpleasant, but I think that they are relevant.
We might have referred to BS 8233 in connection with CA House, which is an office building, but we certainly did not refer to it in the context of sleep disturbance, which is what we are discussing today.
So BS 8233 sometimes applies to existing buildings but not always. Is that the position?
BS 8233 provides useful guidance for new buildings, and I am aware of that guidance.
Apparently, it also sometimes applies to old buildings.
No. I do not think that it particularly applies to old buildings. It provides guidance on standards for different types of spaces.
However, you referred to BS 8233 in connection with an old building?
Yes, I did.
I suggest that that is entirely correct. Can you think—take as long as you like to consider this question, Mr Mitchell—
No. Be brief. Brevity is much valued by the committee.
I am sorry if I am getting tiresome, but I am near the end of my questioning. I want Mr Mitchell to be clear about this.
Absolutely.
Mr Mitchell, can you think of any sensible reason why the City of Edinburgh Council should insist on a noise level of 45dB for a new building next to a tramline but on 82dB—which would be, say, 70dB inside—for an old building?
With respect, I think that the figures are a bit inconsistent. For example, you have introduced the figure of 70dB, which refers to the noise level if a window is partially open, not to the noise level—
I am sorry—I cannot hear you.
I said that you had rather confused the question by introducing the 70dB figure.
Are you saying that, even if it were required of you, you could not attenuate the noise level to 45db inside?
I think that that sort of maximum noise level would be difficult to achieve by measures at source.
But what sort of measures? I am sure that in Wester Coates Terrace you could take attenuation measures that would bring down the noise level to 45dB inside and 60dB outside.
That would be quite difficult.
Are you saying that it would be impractical?
In that location—and perhaps in others—we would have to build very high screens or, more likely, put the line in a tunnel.
But surely one way of dealing with the problem is to lay the track differently.
I do not think that there is any practicable scheme that could achieve an LAmax of 45dB inside or 60dB outside.
I was advised otherwise. Whom should I ask about this? Not you, obviously, because you are not an engineer.
I am an acoustician.
A what?
An acoustician.
Yes, well, whom should I ask about whether the noise levels could, if necessary, be attenuated?
You could ask your expert witness what sort of measures he would envisage at the source—
No. Which of the promoter's witnesses should I ask about whether this could be done? I understood that it would be no problem. It would, of course, be more expensive.
I have not looked at the matter because I do not think that it is necessary. I believe that people will still sleep if the noise levels are much higher than that.
I think that the point has been made. Indeed, I am struggling to find where the matter is mentioned in the rebuttal witness statement, but I have allowed a degree of latitude. Can we move on?
I have two more questions for you, Mr Mitchell. Although your rebuttal statement refers to a World Health Organisation expert group in 2002 that suggested that only field studies should be used—
On a point of order, convener. You have already determined that we have received a sufficiency of information on this point.
Thank you for the reminder.
With the greatest of respect, I should say, before you rule on this matter, that the WHO document is very big. I wish to refer to a quite different part—
I understand that, but you—
I ask committee members to stop engaging in debate with the objectors' representatives. I am minded to rule that we have received a sufficiency of written and oral evidence from a number of questioners on this matter. Lord Marnoch, I ask you to move on.
Are you aware that, in 2004, a group produced another report to which you have not yet referred?
I am not sure about that one—I do not know which group you are referring to. Many groups are examining different aspects of transport noise.
I ask about that particular group because you refer in your rebuttal statement to a WHO group report in 2002. We have a report from another WHO expert group that—
I am trying to be as flexible and patient as I can be. To which rebuttal witness statement are you referring? Is it the one from Richard Mackenzie to the statement that was prepared by Steve Mitchell, or is it something else? I can find no reference to what you describe in the rebuttal statement, but I might have missed it.
I think—but I have been thinking quite a lot, recently—that we find in Mr Mitchell's rebuttal statement a reference to the World Health Organisation group in 2002.
Yes. My understanding is that we are discussing 2002, not 2004.
But we got the rebuttal statement that refers to the group in 2002, and we have had no opportunity to do anything since then because our rebuttal statement had already been submitted. What we find in the rebuttal statement—this is my only opportunity to bring the matter to your attention—is misleading, as a subsequent group was formed in 2004, which has said something different.
Give me a second, please. [Interruption.] If you wish to make a brief point on the matter, by all means do so. However, I am sure that you will bring this out when you examine your own witness, and I am sure that you will lodge the document if it has not already been lodged.
Certainly, convener. However, I believe that it is only fair to give the witness an opportunity to comment on the matter, which is what I am trying to do.
I like fairness as well as brevity. Carry on, Lord Marnoch.
Are you aware that a group statement was made by the World Health Organisation in 2004?
No. I do not know the document to which you refer. If you tell me its full title, I may recognise it.
It is a group report from 2004, which has two bits to it. The full title is "Report on the second meeting on night noise guidelines" and it is dated "Geneva, Switzerland, 6-7 December 2004". The third conclusion of that document makes it clear that the existing guidelines, which are in the 1999 paper, are
I do not know to which part of the guidance you are referring. It may or may not be the sleep disturbance section. The WHO guidance covers numerous aspects, as you know.
In paragraphs 3.26 and 3.27 of your rebuttal statement, you refer to the field study into aircraft noise. Is that correct?
Yes.
Am I right in thinking that that study was sponsored by—surprise, surprise—the Civil Aviation Authority?
The CAA is the author of the study. It was probably sponsored by the Department for Transport at the time.
In any event, it was not clear to me what you were telling us about paragraph 3.6 of that document. On the face of it, that seems to be important because it acknowledges that the document is to do with deep sleep in the middle of the night. However, it gives us no information about the difficulty of getting sleep and the business of waking early due to LAmax. Do you understand?
Yes, I understand your question. I was asked a fairly similar question earlier.
I did not quite get the answer.
There are lots of comments in the document about what the authors would have liked to research but, unfortunately, did not. The document is very scientific and a huge amount of meta-analysis is done on the data to extract what information is there. One of the things that the authors would have liked to do was to look at that particular aspect of time of night, but they did not have enough data to do that. It is interesting that, as I said earlier, airports tend to operate flights late at night and early in the morning, a bit like when the tramway will operate. I do not think that there is a major reservation about the data that were used.
The document does not tell us about the business of having difficulty in getting sleep and waking up early because of LAmax.
That is what I am trying to answer. The report says that its authors would like to do more research on that—that is what such documents always say. Please bear in mind the fact that airports operate in those hours, so the report is highly relevant.
Perhaps I am sounding argumentative. How can the report be highly relevant if it says that its authors have not done enough research to express a view on the matter?
It says that they have not done enough research on a whole score of things. It is a highly scientific paper, and the authors would like to do more research on lots of things. It just so happens that the temporal distribution of aircraft flights around the four UK airports that were studied is probably quite similar to the temporal distribution of our tram services.
This is my final question. In regard to both LAeq and LAmax, you said to Mr Thomson that the noise and vibration policy gives responsible levels consistent with best practice. However, far from doing that—I regret to put this to you—your noise and vibration policy does nothing of the sort. However, you disagree.
Of course I do. I have written three or four such policies, which have been acceptable to other authorities.
That is all I have to ask.
Thank you, Lord Marnoch. I hope that you did not find the experience too unpleasant.
It was different, convener.
I am sure that it was. I shall take lessons from you in the future.
And I from you, madam.
I suspend the meeting for two minutes for a quick comfort break.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
We resume with Mr Scrimgeour for group 34, who will put questions to Steve Mitchell.
In discussion with the clerks, we agreed that the questions would be split between me and Mark Clarke. Mark will deal with the first half of the statement.
They never told me that.
I discussed it with David Cullum and Jane Sutherland this morning.
On the basis that somebody is apologising in my ear, I take what you say to be accurate. That does not necessarily extend the session.
No.
As you know, brevity is much appreciated. Will Mr Clarke go first?
Yes. I had several points to make about the WHO guidelines—I know that you are nodding and shaking your head, convener, but I ask you to allow me to finish my sentence. I realise that the guidelines have been covered significantly over the piece, but I have two one-line points to make that have not previously been made.
Okay.
Mr Mitchell has said that he could conceive of no way to achieve 45dB(A) for trams in the evening. Section 2.2.2 of the WHO "Guidelines for Community Noise", which is on transportation noise, says:
Reducing the tram speed would reduce the noise, but it would also increase the period of the noise event as the tram passed a house. I do not believe that reducing the speed would suddenly reduce noise to 45dB.
But you agree that if the speed were reduced, the noise would be reduced.
Yes, of course.
My final point refers to page 28 of the guidelines. The final paragraph, which covers the WHO's views on sleep disturbance, is well worth referring to. I rewind to my opening question, regarding baseline noise measurements. Do you agree that an important consideration in assessing the noise impact of tramline 1 is the change in ambient noise levels that it will produce at noise-sensitive receptors, such as residential dwellings and schools?
Yes. I think that I answered that earlier.
The baseline noise survey was performed during July when, in comparison with winter, the available daylight, gardening and lawn mowing activity, children's play, bird and animal activity, and recreational use of gardens in the walkway, would all be at a peak. How can the readings that were taken be truly representative of the average annual sound exposure of the residents?
As I am sure you are aware, the critical noise levels are those at night, and I do not think that those levels are affected by the sources that you listed.
We did not just survey at night. Surveys were performed across the whole period. My position is that the survey does not represent a proper annual representation of the noise experience of the Roseburn corridor residents.
The survey followed practice that is used for environmental statements. Of course, I would have liked to have more baseline noise survey data—that is always a good thing—but we had enough to do the assessment. The seasonal point that you raise is not strong. The baseline survey was adequate. Peer reviewers mentioned that it was adequate. I do not think that it jeopardised our assessment. In terms of the mitigation that we recommended, as I said earlier, strangely enough, because it is the threshold levels that are critical, the extent of mitigation is not critically dependent on the baseline.
But you agree that, had a wider survey been performed, the results might have been different and might have been lower.
One day, one will measure higher; the next day, one will measure lower. In doing surveys, a lot of skill is needed to avoid extraneous and atypical events. My surveyors are trained to do that. They have the necessary qualifications and years of experience behind them to perform a representative baseline noise survey. Doing a survey is not as simple as pointing a sound level meter and measuring everything. It is important to be aware of unusual events and to do a professional job.
Surely you agree that doing a survey in July, when activity around the gardens and walkway is greater, would be bound to give higher sound level readings than would be obtained over the winter months. In the winter, people would not be mowing lawns, listening to the radio in their garden, or playing or walking around the walkway, or at least they would be doing so to a lesser extent?
I assure you that my surveyors would not have recorded ambient levels as typical if a lawnmower or radio was going. They would have avoided those events. They are trained to do that.
So you are telling me that none of those noises would have been recorded.
They would have come back at another time or moved to a representative site nearby. When one is doing a baseline noise survey and one comes across something that is atypical, or relatively unusual, one excludes it because it could give a higher value.
But is that not what the LA90 reading does—exclude the higher values?
It may do, but if the radio is operating all the time, it does not. It is good practice to avoid such things. Quite commonly, when someone is doing a noise survey a dog will bark at them, but they would not record that value because it would be rather unprofessional to do so.
Okay. Thank you. I will move on. Baseline readings were not generally taken at the extremes of the hours of operation—at 12.30 am or 5 am. That would have been relevant in making a true comparison of the change in the noise environment for those times, given that those readings are likely to have been the lowest ambient readings and that most sleep disturbance would be caused then. Why were readings not taken at those times?
We generally tried to take measurements after midnight and before 6 or 7 in the morning. Obviously there are practical limitations such as how much time there is and how difficult it is to do that.
But taking readings at the extremes would have provided a better representation of the ambient levels at that time.
Some of the measurements were taken at the extremes.
I do not believe that any of the measurements in table 12.1 are at the extremes; I have looked at it carefully. Some of them are after midnight and some are as early as 5.40, but none is at 5 and none is at 12.30.
I have an understanding, as do my surveyors, of how noise tends to vary with time. It does not vary that quickly by time of night. If we measure within half an hour or an hour, we will get a similar noise level. The times are representative. The precise time is not critical.
Do you agree that the eight-hour LAeq between 11 pm and 7 am gives a skewed result for the tram operation noise, as it includes the silent period between 12.30 and 5 am?
Are we still talking about measuring baseline? I am sorry, but I did not understand the question.
Excuse me for a second. I am just flicking past the questions regarding the WHO guidelines and PAN 56, which I think have been well covered.
Excellent. I commend you for that action.
I will mention the WHO, but in an entirely different context. A fundamental issue with the noise survey is that it measures sound not noise. Noise, as defined by the WHO is unwanted sound. Do you agree?
I agree with the second part, but not the first. The sound level meter measures sound, as its name suggests. It measures everything.
Do you agree that the definition of noise as unwanted sound is reasonable?
Yes, that is a good definition to distinguish noise from sound.
The sounds measured at Blinkbonny Road and Craigleith Bank—the two areas nearest to Craigleith Drive, where I live—were of pedestrians, cyclists, joggers, birdsong and, at Craigleith Bank only, the distant buzz of traffic. I suggest that only the traffic fits the category of unwanted sound. The disturbance caused by the noise of the trams must be more significant. Do you agree?
No.
Is it not the case that the noise of the trams would be at an entirely different frequency from the noise made by joggers or birds?
It would perhaps be at a different frequency and would of course be of a different character. I am trying to think of an example. If somebody was listening to the radio, which would be a sound, in the back garden, it might well mask the noise of the tram. When we measure the baseline noise in the environment, we measure everything.
My understanding is that the different frequency of noises cannot be directly compared. Is that the case?
It depends on what you are doing. If you are doing an environmental assessment, it is a well established procedure to use the A-weighted values—the A refers to the A in LAeq—which I think that you have endeavoured to understand. None of the experts here has questioned that. It takes care of the whole frequency question. It implies a frequency weighting to the sound, which takes care of the subject.
My understanding was that if, for instance, tram noise or the noise of a machine were introduced into an environment—irrespective of whether the reading that is being taken is an A-weighted reading—the birdsong effect would be cumulative rather than supportive, as it were.
Yes. Is it the rule of thumb of 3dB being a perceptible change in noise that you want me to explain? I am happy to do so.
I am talking about the fact that, according to the rule of thumb, the way in which people perceive loudness is dependent on the frequency of the noise that is created. Therefore, the noise of 10 violins might be experienced as being double the noise of one violin, whereas the noise of a piece of machinery operating at approximately the same dB(A) level as birdsong might be experienced as being double the level of noise.
With respect, that is a rather confused understanding of the issue. I will try to help. I have explained the issue in the "What is Noise?" document but it might be better if I were to explain it to you interactively.
That is the case when the noises are similar. What about when they are dissimilar?
When they are dissimilar, the noise will be more noticeable. In fact, you can hear sounds that are below the existing background noise levels.
In other words, if you introduced the tram into an environment in which one is measuring ambient noise such as birdsong and joggers, the noise of the tram would be extremely noticeable.
The noise of the tram would be noticeable because it has a different character. However, the overall ambient noise levels would not increase by a significant amount, if we are talking about an increase of less than 3dB.
But the loudness would be more significant.
If the noise level passed the 3dB rule of thumb, most people would say, "It has become louder around where I live." Of course, they would hear the tram.
The baseline survey was intended to be representative, yet the houses on Craigleith Drive that are closer to the proposed tramline than almost all the houses that were included in the survey were missed out of the initial survey. Many of the houses in that area, including those referred to, will experience the worst exposure at first-floor level and yet, in your table 13.5, you say that the screening effect of the embankment will reduce noise levels for Craigleith Drive by 6dB, even though the windows of those houses at first-floor level—in other words, the bedrooms—are broadly parallel to the existing walkway. Does the 6dB figure apply to those windows?
We modelled that in some detail and that is the case. It is to do with the fact that the embankment does not stop exactly where the railway stops but protrudes beyond the track. That allows enough space for people to escape and suchlike and for it to be stable. The section outside the rail provides some acoustic screening. In your case, it is about 6dB.
But you are saying that the embankment would provide 6dB screening.
Yes, given the design of the embankment as we envisage it at present. We modelled it in three dimensions in a computer simulation and that is the estimate that it gives.
Okay.
If you are concerned about that, I can add that the modelling work will have to be updated and the design may adjust. The work will be repeated and revised. The commitment is to achieve the policy noise levels at your first-floor window.
My concern is that—
We need a question, Mr Clarke.
I will not pose that question.
We are on the environmental statement now, are we?
We are on an appendix to the environmental statement.
Well, yes.
Okay. Thanks.
But that does not mean that the methodology that we have used is wrong.
I hear what you say.
Some noise sources that may or may not happen around tram stops cannot be modelled because they are not easy to predict.
So they have not been modelled.
They have not been modelled in the noise predictions in the environmental statement.
What effect do you think that the change will have, especially in the evening and in the early morning when drivers make their way to tram stops?
Sorry?
I presume that it is anticipated that people will drive to tram stops, leave their cars and get on the tram.
I do not think that that is the assumption.
Will that not happen?
I do not know the answer to that question as that is not my area, but I do not think that we are expecting lots of cars to queue up at a tram stop. That is not what happens with trams. People walk to the stop, get on the tram and make their journey.
I will try to be helpful at this point, because I am aware that there has been a considerable amount of questioning on noise and vibration. Our technical knowledge has been improved a hundredfold. By all means. Mr Clarke, you may ask any new technical questions that would test different areas, but perhaps we should get to the point of what you want to happen by way of mitigation.
Should I address you on that?
You might choose to address Mr Mitchell on the issue. I can be of no assistance to you in that regard. You may choose to lead evidence with your own witnesses on that point. I appreciate the degree of technical questioning that has gone on, but committee members have now exercised their minds on those issues. If there is something fresh that has not been addressed in other questioning led by Mr Dennison, Andy Aitken and Lord Marnoch, by all means share it with us.
At this stage, I will concede the floor to Graham Scrimgeour.
Before you concede the floor, I point out that tea and coffee have arrived outside for everybody. Before there is a stampede, I invite witnesses and the objectors' representatives to help themselves first.
Meeting suspended.
On resuming—
I resume the meeting and ask people to cease the conversations that are taking place around the room. That includes the people who are standing beside the entrance doorway—I ask Mr Vanhagen and Lord Marnoch to resume their seats or to leave, whichever is their preference.
I will wait for Mr Mitchell to get ready.
I think that Mr Mitchell is paying attention.
I have crossed off a lot of my questions. I aim not to cover anything that has been covered before, unless it is to fill in a point that has not been addressed.
You will be my favourite person if you do that.
My starting point is where we were when Mr Mitchell began to give evidence today, which is the amendment that you are proposing. Much of our evidence has related to a number of amendments that we have proposed, which go way back to objections from 18 months ago. Not a lot has been said today about the amendment that is now proposed, but I would like to explore what is being proposed so that we can fully understand it and compare it to what we were looking for. Can you fill us in on the proposed amendment that we heard about earlier?
I do not think that I can fill you in on it, other than on the principle, which is that there will be reference to the noise and vibration policy along the lines of what I said. I have not drafted an amendment or anything like that, but there will be reference in the bill to the noise and vibration policy and its enforcement. That is the amendment that I have been recommending.
Would that cover the level of noise and its mitigation throughout the operational lifetime of the tram?
All such an amendment would do is refer to the noise and vibration policy, so if you are going to ask me a whole sequence of questions about what is in and what is out, I can tell you that it will be a very short reference. It will say that what is in the policy, which has been carefully thought out, will apply.
I have not fully studied that document recently, but we had various amendments—or separate elements of amendments—relating to enforcement. I want to establish whether what we are being offered meets that.
I suggest that in line with other welcome commitments that the promoter has made, the committee would like more detail. It will be of interest to us to know how the City of Edinburgh Council or the promoter—whichever is appropriate—will ensure enforceability of the noise and vibration policy. An explanation of that process would be very helpful indeed.
That will come subsequently.
Yes.
That was the big question. There are some lesser points. We talked today about rail grinding with one of the earlier questioners. Do you think that the frequency of grinding will be less than annual or perhaps annual?
I think that it will be less than annual. I am reluctant to say that it will be every X years, because I could be wrong. It might be X-1 or X+1. All I can do is give you an example to illustrate the point. I understand that some sections of the Croydon system, which opened in May 2000, have not been ground and that some sections have been ground once in five years.
If grass track bed is used along the Roseburn corridor, might that increase the frequency with which rail grinding would be required to bring the rails back up to standard?
No.
What would the noise level be from grinding activity?
That would depend on the machine and on this, that and the other thing; however, what I have said before is that the grinding will disturb some people—it is very difficult to do quietly.
Will the noise level be 70dB, 80dB, 90dB or 100dB?
The answer depends on where you are asking me about. I do not want to put a number to it, but I accept that it could disturb people.
It is proposed at the moment that the grinding should happen at night.
It will have to happen at night to avoid disrupting the tramway during daytime.
Could the tram perhaps be closed one line at a time over a section and the work done during the day, when it would cause less disturbance, particularly as it will be required only every few years?
I am not necessarily the person to answer that question, but I know that there is a strong preference against that. You are not going to like what I say, but what you suggest would greatly inconvenience the people who would, by that stage, be travelling daily on the tram.
If the grinding was done outside peak hours, perhaps it could be worked around.
I accept that, but I cannot answer on the mechanics of when it will and will not happen. I do know that it is quite a brief activity and that several hundred metres can be covered—
The matter relates to one of our proposed amendments, which is that maintenance that causes noise should not happen at night.
I apologise for that. That is an error. The tram will clearly run on an embankment in that section.
What would the effect of the embankment be on noise mitigation?
That is a typographical error. There is a list of three locations that I describe as being deep cuttings, and that section is included. Clearly it is not in a cutting, but we have not modelled it in a cutting, but on an embankment. I apologise.
So there is not an error in the work that has been done.
No—there is an error in the wording.
I accept that.
Yes, I do. I base that on my professional judgment. I hope that that judgment carries some weight, because this is not the first scheme of its kind that I have looked at. I have advised TIE and the promoter that I think that the levels are achievable. We outlined the noise screening measures that might be included. There could be up to 2.5km of noise screens on the Roseburn corridor to achieve the noise standards that we have set ourselves.
What about enforcement?
I have a responsibility to set targets that I believe to be achievable. The targets are based on experience; they are not guesswork.
In your rebuttal and in your statement you said that you cannot have a limit. What would be the nature of the enforcement if it were not mandatory?
I would call it a target rather than a limit. I will try to explain what I mean.
What would happen if you missed the target?
In that case, we would have to test whether the target was achievable using best practicable means. We talked about that previously. It is just possible that for some unexpected reason a target cannot be reached, so the tramway would have to be closed, which is why we cannot accept a mandatory limit. However, we have offered the best-practicable-means test.
We have heard quite a lot about that. Earlier, there was discussion of whether a 45dB mitigated level is achievable. You said that you could not guarantee that it is achievable at source. I presume that you mean mitigation alongside.
That is what I meant, yes.
What other mitigation could achieve that level, including mitigation at source and other mitigation?
By "at source" I mean within the limits of deviation.
Before you get to the dwelling, or the inside of a dwelling, what else could you put in place?
The hierarchy of measures is outlined in the policy; you can have a look at it when you get a moment. If we cannot introduce mitigation at source, we must consider noise insulation, but nobody wants that.
I have not raised the issue of sleep disturbance. What about properties that have a lower baseline at the back? The survey to which you refer deals with noise at the front of properties.
Yes, it does. However, the survey was carried out all over the country; it was designed to represent the dynamics of the whole country.
The Roseburn corridor runs mainly behind properties, so there is a very low baseline to start with.
It is not the baseline that determines whether one gets woken up. It is the—
Again, I have not asked a question about sleep disturbance. I am simply asking about the level of noise and the practicality of mitigating it. Perhaps a level of 45dB could be achieved inside properties at night through source mitigation and sound insulation.
That could be the case if all the properties were insulated against noise. My point is simply that that does not need to be done because people will sleep comfortably through the noise levels.
But people may be enjoying a quiet, peaceful and restful space before they go to sleep.
There is no precedent for carrying out such insulation. The noise insulation regulations cover very much higher noise levels of 68dB during the day and 63dB at night. Those levels are very high compared with the levels that we are discussing.
I want to move on. Paragraph 3.12 of your rebuttal of my witness statement says:
Users will be affected in some way because the corridor will become noisier, but they will still be able to use the corridor as they currently use it.
They will get from A to B, but they would not necessarily enjoy the experience as they currently do.
I cannot comment on enjoyment, but there will be an effect because noise levels will increase.
We are saying that people use the corridor to relax and to get away for peace and quiet.
I accept that.
Paragraph 3.15 of your rebuttal of my witness statement mentions noise in gardens and says that my comments are not relevant because they apply only to the first few metres of gardens that are closest to where the tram would be. Many properties in my street have upper and lower flats and gardens that are split parallel to the Roseburn corridor. The gardens of the upper-floor flats are further away from the property and are nearer the embankment. About half of my garden and the gardens of similar properties would be about 6m from the tram and nearly all of it would be within 11m. Do you still think that my comments are not relevant?
We will have to check the comments to which you refer. I think that you said something like the bottom of your garden would be 6m from the track and that you spoke about the effect of being 6m from the track. I am merely saying that you will not always be 6m away. I think that you will accept that gardens are used intermittently and occasionally.
They are used at weekends.
People do enjoy their gardens at weekends.
People can have lunch outside in their gardens with friends.
Of course.
One wants to hear their conversation, but the described level of noise when a tram passes is like the noise that a lorry makes when it passes 7m away. The peak noise that would be generated would interfere with whatever people were doing in their gardens.
I do not know the distances and speeds that are involved to work things out properly, but people may have to raise their voices to enjoy a conversation if they were right at the bottom of their garden.
All of my garden would be near the tram.
There has been quite a lot of misunderstanding about the use of bells. That misunderstanding is based on press articles and, perhaps, on television programmes about Nottingham in the early days of commissioning and operating trams there. Let us be clear: once the tram is operating, there will be no need to ring the bell at every stop. I am lucky enough to have spent time riding on tram systems such as those in Nottingham and Croydon, which I regularly visit.
I accept your assertions, but given that we are talking speculatively, could monitoring of bell use form part of enforcement? If the bell were used excessively in the corridor, could following up and investigating that be part of the enforcement scheme?
Yes. The last paragraph of the noise and vibration policy covers that. I am happy to quote it to you, but in essence it says that the tram operator will have to develop a policy on the use of the bell in consultation with the council's environmental and consumer services department. Drivers cannot be allowed not to think about their surroundings. Sometimes, drivers think a bit two-dimensionally. The policy will require them to think laterally about where they are. If they must ring the bell for safety reasons, of course they will do that, but the objective of the policy requirement is to ensure that drivers do not use the bell unnecessarily. Perhaps I will read the policy to you to ensure that you are happy with it.
If a problem—perhaps of design—led to a requirement for frequent use, that might produce a need to review and change how things work. Is that allowed for and required?
To be perfectly clear, I will quote the policy. It says:
I agree with everything that you said, but if bell use became an issue, would a mechanism to deal with it be available? If people strayed on to the line at one stop and the bell was used frequently there, would a mechanism be available to address that?
Yes. The policy will provide such a mechanism. A statement will be made that a driver will use a bell here and not there and that when some events happen, he should not use it. It will say that he should think about where he is and whether a footpath is nearby, for example. A mechanism to address the issue will be in place. The policy might need to be revised to make it specific to a site.
That has covered my point.
Your questioning is wider than was indicated to the committee. I am conscious that I have allowed two questioners for group 34. You were supposed to ask questions about paragraphs 5.5, 6.4 and 7.5 to 7.21 of Mr Mitchell's statement. Do you agree that we have strayed wide of them?
I have done that only in responding to Mr Mitchell's rebuttal. Anyway, I have finished.
Excellent. It should be borne in mind that I allowed two questioners for group 34 and that I expect people to stick to the point.
I have few and general questions, because the subject is fairly impenetrable. When she gave evidence about the Starbank and Trinity options, your colleague Karen Raymond answered yes when it was put to her that
Yes. That is why the environmental statement predicts impacts and therefore the mitigation that is needed along the Roseburn corridor. The street-running section has few impacts that need mitigation.
That is our argument for an on-road alignment.
I understand that argument.
I am sure that you appreciate it. A lot has been said about the detail of the decibels and so on, so I just wanted to highlight that.
Question.
Have the potential noise and vibration impacts on pedestrians and cyclists on the Roseburn corridor been measured?
No. We do not have any way to quantify that or to consider how people will be affected in those situations.
I presume that there is a method of assessing what the impacts might be of noise coming into what is currently a traffic-free environment.
We have not assessed that in detail.
Could there be mitigation of the noise and vibration impacts on users of the corridor? I am talking about people who are walking or cycling along the corridor.
There is mitigation in the policy. To start at the beginning, we are committed to buying a fundamentally quiet tram system with a specification that matches the highest industry standard. Therefore, fundamentally, the trams will be quieter than they could be, which is a mitigation measure.
They will not be quieter than having no trams at all.
Of course not. Let us not bore ourselves with stating the obvious.
Will certain construction features that have been planned for the corridor make noise worse? I am thinking for example of retaining walls at the bottom of cuttings. Will they exacerbate the noise for users of the corridor?
If you are talking about reflections from such surfaces, there are ways of dealing with that. Strong reflections can be treated acoustically if necessary.
Are those measures included in the landscape and habitat management plan?
I do not think that the plan goes into details such as the exact materials of retaining structures, although it may refer to that.
Is the impact of noise and vibration on human users and wildlife included in the landscape and habitat management plan?
No, detailed mitigation measures for that are not included in the plan. You have raised the issue a few times, so let me answer. We do not have measures for pedestrians who are walking along streets. I would assess the issue that you raise in a similar way.
You are aware that local people would assess the matter in terms of amenity, which is why I am asking whether mitigation proposals to maximise what may be left of the amenity have been factored into the landscape and habitat management plan.
The issue is what measures are practicable and sensible and would not otherwise compromise the corridor. The best one, which I have talked about already, is mitigation through having fundamentally quiet trams. We are committed to that.
Has the impact of construction noise and vibration on wildlife been assessed, with your input?
Not with my input, although that may have been done as part of the STAG process.
So you have not had recent input, as a noise and vibration expert, to the landscape and habitat management plan.
I imagine that it would be similar to the impact on wildlife of track grinding on railways.
Obviously, the environment that we are considering has not experienced track grinding for many years. Do you agree that there will be an impact and that it should be mitigated?
Do you mean an impact on wildlife?
Yes.
As I said, track grinding happens on heavy railways throughout the country, on corridors that have ecological value. I presume that animals cope with that.
But you have not had input on the subject with your colleagues who deal with the environmental impact.
It is not necessary to assess that, for the reasons that I have just given.
That reason is that, as track grinding happens elsewhere, it will be fine on the Roseburn corridor.
No: it is that evidence shows that where track grinding happens animals manage quite well. I am bound to mention Mr Coates—if you want to consider the effects on animals, some of your questions will have to go to him. However, I am aware that badgers live in rail corridors up and down the country. I presume that they are exposed to rail grinding from time to time, but they continue to live there.
You will accept that we have a genuine concern that those impacts were not factored into the landscape and habitat management plan. Obviously, we feel that they should be taken into account and that you, as a noise expert, should speak to your colleagues about them.
I think that I just answered that point.
Okay. I have finished. Thank you.
Page I-8 of annex I of the Mott MacDonald report refers to noise levels at the facades of residential buildings and states that WHO guidance suggests a guideline facade LAeq of 45dB. It also states:
The rule of thumb for a partially open window is a 15dB noise reduction. That figure was put to me earlier and I agreed with it. When a single-glazed window is closed, the noise reduction will depend on the window. However, the rule of thumb for that is a 25dB reduction, which is 10dB more than for a partially open window.
If the measurement was taken within a building, the noise reduction would rise from 55dB to 70dB, so noise disturbance would be mitigated.
Yes. For modern, double-glazed windows, 30dB is reasonable, but there are systems that get much better figures. Secondary-glazed windows are better again, because the glazing is wider.
Under the Control of Pollution Act 1974, does a local authority have the power to control noise from construction sites at all times of the day?
Yes. There is no restriction on the time of day.
Members have no further questions. Mr Thomson, do you have any follow-up questions for Mr Mitchell?
Yes. Mr Mitchell, can I take you back to one of Lord Marnoch's lines of questioning about the LAeq? He took you through the arithmetic of adding 10dB and producing a perceived doubling of the existing noise level. That was what he put to you and you agreed with his methodology and arithmetic. What would be the consequence of doing that in a setting such as Wester Coates?
The consequence would be that people would perceive it as a noisier place, because the ambient noise level would have roughly doubled. However, recent social survey work that I considered shows that, in the longer term, there would be no residual annoyance. People do not generally use the word "annoyance" when they are asked how they feel about the noise. That is why we set our standards as they are. Very few people will be annoyed in the long term with noise that meets our threshold levels.
You said that the level that you fixed in the noise and vibration policy was tried and tested on tramways elsewhere. Can you tell the committee where those tramways are?
There are two in Birmingham. One is the Centro extension, which the secretary of state approved, from Wednesbury to Brierley Hill. I said that slowly because I was asked to clarify it when I said it previously. The other Birmingham route is the city-centre extension. We also used the same noise and vibration standards as were used in the Liverpool scheme on Merseytram line 1, which has also been approved under the Transport and Works Act 1992.
Has any of those approvals occurred since 1999?
Yes, all three have.
They followed the WHO guidance.
Yes.
So they were all done in the knowledge of the existence of that guidance.
Yes.
Did any of them feature areas similar to Wester Coates—established residential areas with gardens backing on to the proposed tramline?
Yes, the Wednesbury to Brierley Hill extension in Birmingham has a rail corridor that has some similarities to the corridor that we are discussing. Although the housing that borders it is a little bit different, the situation regarding noise assessment is very similar. My work on the Wednesbury to Brierley Hill extension was the first time that I had to go through the process of establishing a reasonable balance in setting a reasonable target for a noise policy. The policy for the docklands light railway, which predated that scheme by some years, is one of the documents that I used for that purpose. The Birmingham scheme has a corridor that is similar to the one that we are discussing and which is in similar proximity to quite a few houses.
Are those examples of the pragmatic approach that you spoke about, as opposed to the approach that one might take when considering whether to grant planning permission for a new house?
I am sorry; I did not catch that because someone made a noise.
Are the approvals of noise policies for those three tram schemes examples of what you described as a pragmatic approach, as opposed to the approach that one might take when considering whether to grant planning permission for a new house, in which circumstance it might be possible to incorporate soundproofing in the design at day one?
Yes. I think that those policies recognise that, pragmatically speaking, there are limits to what one can do when one builds new infrastructure. For example, when one builds a road, there are limits to how quiet one can make the process. The policies that you asked about apply a pragmatic approach and the situation to which they relate is very different from the new house situation.
I am sure that Mr Mitchell will be relieved that there are no further questions for him. I thank you for giving evidence this afternoon.
Mr Blower, what ground condition investigations have been carried out along the Roseburn corridor and what have they disclosed?
In accordance with BS 10175, a phased approach has been taken to the investigations that have been undertaken to date. That is standard industry practice. The first phase of such work is a desk study, during which all existing information is examined before boreholes are drilled and so on. That desk study—which, in accordance with BS 10175, is called a preliminary investigation—has been completed and reported on. Following a preliminary investigation, an exploratory investigation is conducted. During a preliminary investigation, special features along the route are noted that might be anticipated to give rise to problems. One would pay particular attention to those areas in the exploratory investigation.
Do you have any previous experience of the construction of tramlines on disused railway corridors?
I have, indeed. I have had most experience with phase 3 of the Manchester metrolink and I have worked on lines 2 and 3 of the Nottingham NET scheme. I have also worked on the Merseytram system in Liverpool and on other light rail and guided busway schemes in Wigan, Leigh, Luton and so on. All of them reused old railway corridors.
Thank you very much, Mr Blower.
Mr Clarke, on behalf of group 34, will address issues in paragraphs 1 to 3.10 of Mr Blower's witness statement.
Mr Blower, in your statement, you say that the site investigation is at an early stage. Is that right?
Yes.
Do you agree that unknown ground conditions are a high risk to construction costs?
Yes.
Is a lack of information at this stage a major obstacle to the scheme and should the Parliament treat it as such?
No.
But you agree that unknown ground conditions represent a high risk to costs.
Yes. You are quite right to pick on the word "risk". For such major schemes, problems with ground conditions are usually dealt with through taking a risk-assessment approach. In the phased approach set out in BS 10175, one carries out a preliminary investigation that takes a broad perspective of the scheme by locating areas where one might expect to find major problems. In the subsequent exploratory investigation, one focuses on those areas. With such an approach, one always has to take two more steps, which might be the main investigation that has yet to be undertaken and, if necessary, some supplementary investigations. At each step, we try to manage down the uncertainty. I believe that, after carrying out the preliminary and exploratory investigations, we have an adequate handle on the scope of any likely problems.
Do you agree that the potential consequences of possible major earthworks and drainage could seriously affect the future reasonable expectation of enjoyment by residents of the properties along the Roseburn corridor?
The construction of major earthworks along the corridor would have a significant impact only during the construction phase. Are you talking about earthworks during construction?
Yes.
They could have an effect. However, we do not envisage any significant earthworks on the project.
I have no further questions.
Mr Thomson helpfully asked my first question, which Mr Blower answered by confirming that site investigations have been carried out and that nothing unexpected has been found.
In general, I cannot see why a light rail scheme should cause problems if a heavy rail scheme operated in the same area for decades. As you said, problems occurred with heavy rail, but I would like to separate out the landslip issue from the waste material issue. Evidence that I have seen from certain people mentions soil being washed over or down the surface of the slopes. In technical terms, that is not a landslip, but a drainage problem. Gary Turner or other witnesses might address that point later. To me, a landslip is a large bulk movement of soil that happens when the soil's strength is exceeded by the stresses that have been imposed on it.
It could have been ballast, clinker or what have you. I have not investigated; that has simply been reported to me.
Ballast and clinker are pretty robust granular materials. If anything, I would want to have those in my railway embankment, rather than take them out. Generally speaking, they will be good granular materials of high strength.
We now come to Mr Jones and group 35.
Mr Blower, you mentioned low retaining structures. What form do those take?
That has not been determined yet. They could be of solid construction, using reinforced concrete. It is perhaps more likely that they will be gabion retaining walls or even reinforced earth. The final face that people will see could be a hard surface, but it could just as easily be a stone or earth surface.
What sort of height would they be?
I think that that will come out in the detailed design. I do not envisage them being many metres high. When we say "low retaining walls", to my mind that implies something of man height or less.
At the Coltbridge viaduct, there will be the tram track and, I believe, a footpath at the side of the bridge. How will the earth at the top of the embankment be strengthened?
A structural solution could be applied. Wimbles could be attached to the widened bridge and the earth could be supported in that way. I imagine that, if that is not done, a reinforced earth solution would be applied. That would involve excavating a certain amount of material and putting in what is known as a geogrid—that is a very high-strength plastic grid, which allows natural soil to stand at a steeper angle than it would otherwise be able to.
There are no further questions. Thank you very much, Mr Blower, for waiting to give your evidence today.
Yes.
That concludes item 2 on the agenda. We now move to item 3, our discussion in private of the oral evidence that we have heard today. Members will recall that we agreed to take such consideration in private at the end of each oral evidence-taking session to enable the committee to give some consideration to the evidence that it has heard. That will greatly assist us in drafting our report at the end of phase 1 of the consideration stage.
Meeting continued in private until 18:05.