Police have committed to a continuing search for the missing body Continue reading
Tag Archives: Ardgartan
Biker dies on A83
(Updated 09.00 2nd June 2010) A crash between a motorbike and a car at Ardgartan at around 4.30pm Continue reading
£2.1 million Forest Holidays’ luxury log cabins open at Ardgartan
The Forestry Commission’s Forest Holidays today saw Environment Continue reading
Transport Scotland to remove lethal wooden roadside barriers in Argyll – Mather welcomes triumph for public opinion
What Argyll’s MSP Jim Mather has welcomed as a triumph for public opinion is just that. Transport Scotland has finally given way on the issue of the wooden roadside barriers that allegedly caused such dreadful injuries to people whose vehicles crashed into them. For Argyll has been graphic on such injuries in past reports to underline just how appallingly dangerous these barriers were. We have no need now to repeat or add to that.
Transport Scotland has announced that it is taking steps to replace these recently erected wooden barriers which, in earlier installations, were responsible for several fatal accidents in the 1970s and 1980s.
Mr Mather congratulates those concerned members of the public who very actively campaigned against the fences. This included:
- medical practitioners and paramedics – who had reason to know at first hand just how awful were the injuries the fences had caused before
- local councillors like Donnie MacMillan who also knew what had happened last time around
- people whose relatives and friends had suffered in the broken jaws of these structures
- lawyers like Graeme Pagan who, as Procurator Fiscal in OBan, had presided over earlier fatalities
- all of the local press
- countless letter writers who could not believe that evidence and obvious common sense could be so lightly set aside
- For Argyll
Sadly, there have been accidents at these fences in their current incarnation – including a particularly bad fatality on the A83 at Ardgartan on upper Loch Long in the Autumn of 2008. At this stage it is not known whether an inquest has yet been held in this case or, if so, what the pathologists’s conclusions were about the role of the barrier in the outcome.
In any case, it will be hard for the family of the dead man concerned to see Transport Scotland’s action taken so late, when it could have been effected so much earlier. Even worse is the possibility that between now and the removal of the fences there may be other accidents in which they may be thought to have inflicted yet more serious injuries and fatalities.
Transport Scotland should do what it takes to get all of these wooden barriers removed without delay. They are to be replaced by wire mesh fencing.
Mr Mather, an energetic campaigner on this issue himself, says: ‘This is an excellent example of a successful and measured campaign by members of the public who were genuinely concerned at the re-appearance of a form of wooden barrier similar to those which had been responsible for several fatal accidents around thirty years ago in Argyll. At that time it was only after a sustained campaign involving a great deal of public involvement that the roads authorities were persuaded to remove the wooden roadside barriers throughout Argyll.
‘When a similar type of barrier was recently erected at Cromalt, close to Inveraray and on the seaward side of the trunk road between Ardgartan and Arrochar, strong representations were made to the Trunk Road Authority. Among those most concerned were relatives of those who lost their lives in earlier accidents and their campaign was successfully co-ordinated by retired lawyer Graeme Pagan, who was Procurator Fiscal in Oban when the dangers of the original wooden barriers was first identified.
‘I was happy to be associated with the action to remove those new barriers and to help bring the previous history of the matter to the attention of the Minister and the Trunk Roads Authority.
‘I am relieved and encouraged at the success of this campaign. We are all rightly concerned when we see actions being taken that we perceive to be misguided or misinformed. It is good to see that such a campaign can bring forward the right result and I congratulate all those involved, both those who campaigned and the authorities who have responded, for their work on this’.
Update: The photograph above, by Rebecca Martin, was taken on 15th January and shows the Transport Scotland wooden barrier at Cromalt, south of Inveraray, with demolition already begun.
The cross pieces – which were largely responsible for the horrific injuries inflicted on people in cars crashing into the barriers – have been removed and removed so swiftly that the nails that held them to the uprights have been left bare ended. These are now a secondary danger and mainly to the pedestrians the barriers were said to have been constructed to protect.
Transport Scotland to add road traffic barriers as protection against controversial wooden fences
For Argyll, with other media, has consistently drawn attention to the installation of wooden barriers in lochside locations in Argyll by TranServ. This was done against all advice and against the experience of traumatic injuries when such fences were in use several years ago. At that stage the fences were withdrawn for safety reasons but have recently been reintroduced to sustained controversy.
Now, after an investigation into what happened when a car left the A83 south of Inveraray and went through one of these fences, the fences themselves are to be buffered against traffic leaving the road with the installation of additional barriers.
Since the Inveraray incident, there has been a very recent fatality where two vehicles were in collision at Ardgartan on the A83 on Loch Long. Both vehicles went through the fence there, and man in his sixties who was a passenger in one of them, died. It is not yet known what injuries contributed to the death of this man.
While Transport Scotland‘s plans may reduce injuries to road users if the approporiate barriers are installed, it does not answer some basic questions aroud the introduction of the fences themselves.
The fences were said to have been installed t=for the protection of pedestrians, regardless of the risk they posed to road traffic. For Argyll is pursuing the matter. It wants to know:
- What risk assessment was done before the fences were installed?
- What the results of such risk assessments were?
- What numbers of pedestrians had been falling onto the shores in the locations where the fences were later installed?
- Did the man killed at Ardgartan in the recent road accident at the fence there, suffer injuries caused by the fencing and contributing to his death?
Fatal road accident on A83 on 6th November
For Argyll carried details yesterday of the eight-hour closure of the A83 because of a fatal road accident near Ardgartan on Loch Long in Argyll.
Around 2.40pm yesterday, a 43 year-old man was driving his Dodge pick-up southbound along the A83 towards Arrochar when it collided with a northbound Mercedes Sprinter van near Ardgartan being driven by a 36 year old man.
The 43 year-old driver of te pick-up was taken to the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley where he is presently receiving treatment. Hospital staff describe his condition as ‘stable’. Sadly, his 64 year-old male passenger died at the scene.
The 36 year-old male driver of the Mercedes van was also taken to hospital with minor injuries and discharged after treatment. It is understood that he had been delivering materials from Edinburgh to Inveraray Castle and was on his return journey.
Enquiries are continuing to establish the full circumstances of the crash. Witnesses are asked to contact Road Policing officers at Dumbarton Police Office on 01389 822124. Such contacts can be off the record.
A83 now reopened
11.15pm 6th November: The A83 is now open again, after being closed in both directions because of a road accident at Ardgartan, understood to have been a fatal one.












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