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Pedestrians feel the squeeze from cars and planners

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Christopher DeWolf

When urban planner Peter Cookson-Smith steps out of his Wan Chai office, he does not like what he sees.

'You go out into the street and find yourself walking on the road because the pavements are so crowded,' he said. 'People just want to walk in an unobstructed way, but there are railings everywhere and you must walk halfway down the block just to find a crossing. It's psychologically debilitating. You think, 'oh my God, how do I get from here to there'?'

The city's pavements are becoming more and more crowded - and planners and urban design critics say the government's transport polices are only worsening the situation.

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'Pedestrians are not respected in Hong Kong,' said Pong Yuen-yee, former vice-president of the Hong Kong Institute of Planners. And that is despite the fact that more than 90 per cent of Hongkongers get around by foot and public transport, Pong says.

'For a long time, the vehicular traffic has been the top priority. These days, people don't want to walk in the streets because of the air quality, because of the environment, the noise. They forget what a pleasant footpath can be like.'

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Twelve years ago, the Transport Department launched an ambitious plan to restrict portions of shopping areas to pedestrians. But progress has mostly ground to a halt since 2004.

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