Settle Town Logo
  • News
  • National Park Input to Travel

National Park Input to Travel


News Release:  

Public asked for “active travel” wishlist

People are being asked to share ideas on how active travel routes into, and around, the Yorkshire Dales National Park could be created or improved.

Active travel refers to journeys that involve some form of physical activity.  In the National Park this includes walking, “wheeling” (wheelchair or active mobility aid), cycling and horse riding. The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority has opened a six-week survey, asking people to submit their route suggestions on an interactive map.

Suggestions could range from infrastructure changes such as a crossing point on a busy road, a better link from a housing estate to a school, or the creation of a traffic-free right of way between towns and villages.

Responses to the National Park Authority’s survey will be used to draw up the first “Active Travel Plan” for the National Park. This will complement work being undertaken by Lancashire, North Yorkshire and Westmorland & Furness Councils, with the aim of developing more opportunities for safe and accessible routes and improving key connections into and across the National Park.

Member Champion for Recreation Management at the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, Lizzie Bushby, said: “We would like to see walking, ‘wheeling’ and cycling become easier options for making everyday journeys, for residents and visitors. The aim is to improve routes and connections so that they are suitable and attractive, for example, for a family, or for self-propelled as well as all-terrain electric wheelchair users.   We have an excellent and well-maintained highway network in the National Park, but, at the moment, it’s only the most confident cyclists who will take to the main roads.

“Our survey on active travel is essentially a mapping exercise.   We are looking to find out where people want to go and how they want to get there.   It’s about identifying and improving routes which provide opportunities for local communities and visitors to improve their physical and mental health and wellbeing.

The work of producing an Active Travel Plan has been made possible by a grant of £100,000 received from Active Travel England. All National Park Authorities in England have received the same amount of funding.

Ms Bushby added:  “It’s good to see these resources being focussed on rural areas because up to now active travel has usually been seen as being about improving urban spaces for pedestrians and cyclists.  This work represents a real opportunity to improve our locality and I would encourage people to complete the survey.”

Dales Ribblehead Viaduct

The aim is to create a draft Active Travel Plan by next March, to be refined and approved by the end of 2025. Once the plan has been finalised the intention is to identify potential funding so that the Plan can be implemented over a 10-year period.

It is hoped that Active Travel England will in future be able to provide further funding and resources to support both strategic, traffic-free, multi-user routes as well as small, so-called “missing links” to provide communities and visitors with easier access to active travel infrastructure.

The survey will be open until Tuesday 22 November 2025.

The landing page for the survey is:

www.yorkshiredales.org.uk/plan-your-visit/essential-information/travel-information/active-travel/

This page links to the survey itself:

survey123.arcgis.com/share/3f589e75090c496193107e266ae27104

Ads
Ads

More News Articles

  1. Sick of the City Scramble?

    Sick of the City Scramble?

    Your 60-Minute Reset is Waiting in Settle. If you live in or near Leeds, Manchester, or Lancaster, you know the “Saturday Scramble.” It’s the alarm you didn’t want to set. It’s the hunt for a parking space in a concrete multi-storey. It’s the fluorescent hum of a shopping mall, the lukewarm chain coffee, and the […]

    Read More
  2. Tranquillity & Luxury

    Tranquillity & Luxury

    Want to get away from the hustle and bustle of daily life? Hide yourslef away in our loft room at the King William the Fourth Guest House in Settle. With a King Sized Double bed and its own lounge area, and bathroom with a double jacuzzi bath! During the day you could take yourself on […]

    Read More
  3. digital marketing skills help

    digital marketing skills help

    York and North Yorkshire Growth Hub are running a 2-day workshop in Bentham for digital marketing skills with Purple Creative in March, suitable for businesses in the area that might be interested in this support. Here’s the website link:  2 Day Digital Marketing Workshop: Bentham – Y&NY Growth Hub Download QR

    Read More