Councillors reject cemetery traffic suggestions as 'impractical'
Traffic plans in the area of a proposed 11-storey columbarium at the Cape Collinson cemetery hit a major roadblock yesterday.
![Traffic plans in the area of a proposed 11-storey columbarium at the Cape Collinson cemetery hit a major roadblock yesterday. Photo: Dickson Lee](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/2014/09/05/scmp_05apr14_ns_chingming9_dl_0800a_42141981.jpg?itok=tjwyo5tF)
Traffic plans in the area of a proposed 11-storey columbarium at the Cape Collinson cemetery hit a major roadblock yesterday.
District councillors sent UK-based consulting firm Halcrow - contracted by the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department - back to the drawing board after two of its three traffic management suggestions were called impractical.
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Councillors yesterday approved the location of the columbarium, but agreed more work was needed on a traffic solution.
Lawmaker Christopher Chung Shu-kun lashed out at the traffic proposal. "The department should look for [another] consulting firm and gather [more] opinions from the councillors," he said.
The proposed 3,800 sq ft facility will add 25,000 niches to the existing 214,000 public niches, but residents fear traffic during peak seasons - such as the Ching Ming grave-sweeping festival - could cause too much congestion in the area.
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