06 Jun 1998
Multiplexes with huge car parks have been proposed in Liverpool, London, Newport,Worcester, Bicester and many other towns. If approved they will fuel further growth in leisure travel which has already risen by a fifth in the last decade [2] and encourage further applications. Cinema operators estimate that 84% of movie-goers arrive by car [3].
Preventing these and similar traffic-generating developments will be a key task for Deputy Prime Minister, John Prescott, if he is to be successful in his wish to see many more people using public transport and far fewer journeys by car in five years time [4].
Tony Bosworth, Friends of the Earth's Transport Campaigner, said:
More and more people are going to the pictures. That's good news, but it could cause traffic chaos and more pollution if most arrive by car. The Government must stop multiplexes being built with massive car parks and make sure they are sited where people can reach them by public transport, by bike or on foot.
John Prescott has a starring role in this drama. He must turn down the applications that are on his desk at the moment and bring in tougher controls on traffic generating development in his Transport White Paper later this month.
Up to 24,000 people die prematurely every year because of air pollution. That's the equivalent of fourteen Titanics. Action to cut car use is essential if these deaths are to be stopped.
ENDS
NOTES TO EDITORS:
[1] Cinema attendances in the UK have risen from 54 million per year in 1984 to 139 million in 1997,and a forecast of 171 million in 2000. This growth is fuelling the boom in the development of multiplex cinemas. The first multiplex in Britain was opened in Milton Keynes in 1985. There are currently about 100 multiplexes, and it is predicted that 100 more will open in coming years.
[2] Source: National Travel Survey 1994/96
[3] Figures from UCI Cinemas
[4] Guardian, 6th June 1997
[5] Briefing with fuller details on these schemes available from Friends of the Earth
Contact details:
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Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html
Media team