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Wyvil Healthy Neighbourhood Timeline

The Wyvil Healthy Neighbourhood statutory consultation timeline broken down into phases

Phases

Phases overview
Selecting the Wyvil Healthy Neighbourhood
Pre-trial data collection and informative engagement
Healthy Neighbourhood Design
What happens next?

Pre-trial data collection and informative engagement

1 October 2024 - 15 December 2024

Before designing a Healthy Neighbourhood, we first learn about the neighbourhood and its community. We speak with residents, businesses, community groups, and protected groups to understand their lived, local experiences. We collect data to assess current street and environmental conditions, and we consider the project's impact on equality. 

Evaluating effects on equality 

Lambeth Council is committed to becoming a borough of equity and justice, with a transport system that is fair for everyone. 

For each of our Healthy Neighbourhood projects, we think about how it will impact different groups of people, so we can advance equality and remove barriers for protected groups. This process is called an Equalities Impact Assessment. It’s a legal requirement and an important part of how Lambeth makes decisions. What we learn from this report helps shape our engagement and design choices.  

As we gather more information throughout the project, we may update our Equalities Impact Assessment to incorporate these insights.  

How we engage 

As part of our engagement, we go out and speak to the local community to make sure their views are represented. We hold in-person events, hold discussions with local ward councillors, carry out online engagement and letter drops so the public can stay informed and their feedback taken on board. 

In the Wyvil Healthy Neighbourhood, we plan to engage with residents, businesses, schools, and local community groups. Their feedback will be recorded and analysed to shape the final designs of the scheme alongside data.

As part of this engagement, we would like to know what is working well, where improvements could be made, and how the Wyvil Healthy neighbourhood is envisioned in the future.

Collecting pre-trial data 

Before we introduce a Healthy Neighbourhood, we will collect pre-trial data. This helps us design the trial more effectively and provides a baseline for comparison once the trial is implemented. With this data, we can make informed decisions about the trial's future, including whether to continue, make changes, or remove it. 

The kind of data we collect will depend on the objectives of the Healthy Neighbourhood. For the Wyvil Healthy neighbourhood, some of the data we collect may include: 

  • Traffic levels and speed 
  • Bus journey times on boundary roads
  • Emergency service data 
  • Through traffic data