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Green lane (road)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Unpaved rural route wider than a footpath
This article is about the type of road. For other uses, seeGreen Lane (disambiguation).
A green lane inGrendon, Northamptonshire

Agreen lane is a type ofroad in theUnited Kingdom, usually anunmetalled or unpavedrural route.

England and Wales

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See also:Byway (United Kingdom)

In particular, a green lane is unmetalled, and may be so infrequently used that there is no wearing of the surface, allowing vegetation to colonise freely, hence "green". Many green lanes are ancient routes that have existed for millennia, such ashollow ways,drover's roads,ridgeways and evenancient trackways.

An overgrown green lane inWorcestershire.

Under modernpublic rights-of-way (PROW) law, the expression "green lane" has no legal meaning. Instead, there are four different types of public right of way, listed below, in addition to public roads:

  • Afootpath has pedestrian rights only.
  • Abridleway allows pedestrians, horse traffic and cyclists.
  • Abyway open to all traffic (BOAT, or just 'byway') is open to all users and all types of traffic. However, as they are unsurfaced, they are often only passable in a 4×4 or on a trail motorbike, as well as by pedestrians and horse riders.
  • Arestricted byway (RB) allows pedestrians, horse traffic and vehicles other than mechanically propelled vehicles (e.g. bicycles, horse-drawn carriages). Restricted byways replaced the olderroad used as a public path (RUPP) classification.

Anunclassified county road (UCR) is an obsolete expression and is no indication of a right of way, although they may be maintained and repaired at public expense by local highway authorities. The surfaces of these routes can vary from broken tarmac and gravel to only grass, often having the appearance of byways. As these routes are maintained at public expense, along with the rest of the highway network, it is presumed[according to whom?] that these routes are open to all traffic. They are not shown on thedefinitive map.

TheCountryside Act 1968 required allhighway authorities to reclassify RUPPs in their area—occasionally as footpaths but in practice generally as bridleways, unless public vehicular rights were demonstrated to exist, in which case the road was classified as a byway open to all traffic. This process involved extensive research into historic usage and often public enquiries. Section 47 of theCountryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 set a time limit of 2026 for every highway authority to complete the reclassification exercise. TheNatural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006 (NERC) changed the deadline to 2 May 2006.

This change is significant as RUPPs allowed motorised vehicular access, while restricted byways do not. This change resulted in some conflict between user groups. Somehighway authorities neglected to carry out their responsibilities under theNational Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949. This has meant that some counties, e.g. Somerset, have minimal off-road rights of way available to motorised vehicles, while other counties, e.g. Kent and Wiltshire, have a considerably more extensive network still available to vehicular users. It is calculated[according to whom?] that before the CRoW Act approximately 5% of the national rights of way network was open to vehicular use, while post-CRoW this has halved to around 2 to 3%.

The various users of rights of way disagree (often passionately) about the other users' rights. Walkers' groups (such as theRamblers' Association) advocate the removal of vehicular rights on BOATs. Cyclists' and equestrians' groups fear for their rights, while vehicular use of public rights of way is increasingly being seen as unacceptable[citation needed] and has been targeted for further restrictions.[citation needed] The rights of vehicle users are represented by the Green Lane Association,[1] also known as GLASS, All Terrain UK[2] and the Trail Riders Fellowship,[3] who oppose these restrictions on the basis that a road is just that, regardless of the type of surface.

Jersey

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Green Lane signage in Jersey

InJersey, a Green Lane is a road designated as priority for pedestrians, cyclists and horse-riders to which a 15 mph (24 km/h)speed limit applies. The first Green Lanes were introduced inSt Peter in 1994. Allparishes, exceptSt Saviour andTrinity, have since joined the Green Lane network, but since St Saviour and Trinity adjoin across the Island the Green Lanes in the West and in the East do not link up.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Green Lane Association (GLASS)
  2. ^All Terrain UK (ATUK)
  3. ^Trail Riders Fellowship
  4. ^"That was Jersey: Green lanes". Archived fromthe original on 2008-04-16. Retrieved2008-04-13.

External links

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Look upgreen lane in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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