To help manage the traffic around the city, the Oxfordshire County Council advanced a proposal for building a new ‘Park & Ride’ car park on Grenoble Road, just south of Oxford. This new car park, based on the terms on which it was put forward, should encourage commuters to leave their cars on the outskirts of Oxford and take a bus into the city centre, reducing, therefore in theory, the number of vehicles on busy roads.
However, the proposed size of this project has sparked discussion within the public as it offers only 600 parking spaces, earning nicknames from its critics like ‘pocket’ or ‘Tiny Tim’ car park.
Essentially, this initial proposal for only 600 car spaces worries local representatives as they argue that this amount would be anything but enough for the number of drivers entering south Oxford each day. The local concern is that the parking area would be rapidly filled by morning and the rest of the cars, as a way to find a parking spot, will resort to look for other places to park, which could entail the crowding of residential streets in nearby Blackbird Leys, Sandford and Littlemore or even occupying the spaces at the Kassam Stadium and Vue leisure complex.
This project has two fundamental components on travel in Oxford that the public should be aware of:
- There is an environmental angle which argues that getting cars out of the city centre ensures safer and cleaner streets for cyclists and pedestrians (supported by multiple cycling groups)
- And there is also the view of a commuter as some local politicians point out, arguing that park-and-ride systems are not feasible for everyone as taking the bus can be rather difficult for tradespeople carrying with them heavy tools, shift workers traveling at night or parents having to manage their children’s schools and schedules.
More than the controversies around this newly projected ‘park & ride’, another local transport project, similar in idea but at a larger scale in Eynsham, is maintained on hold, although completed since 2024. This delay is happening as the Eynsham ‘park & ride’ cannot be open until a new road junction is built to connect it to the highway, which is expected to only happen in 2027.
More will be found out about this project as the Oxfordshire council reviews its transport agenda.
