CITY OF LONDON

You are in the section:
City of London > Services > Transport and streets > Roads, highways and pavements > Street furniture - provision and maintenance
Links in this section:
Abnormal loads - notification
Accident reporting
Demonstrations and parades - granting of permission
Highways online
Lighting - street lights
Lighting - traffic lights
Pavements - maintenance
Pavements - obstructions
Roads - access to property
Roads - bridges
Roads - closures and diversions
Roads - gritting
Roads - maintenance
Roads - obstructions
Roads - road-works
Roads - snow clearance
Roads - speed limits
Roads - weight limits
Street furniture - provision and maintenance
Street parking - pavements
Vehicle access - kerbs
See also:
Car parks - council
Car parks - private
Civil emergencies - flooding
Cycle lanes and routes
Disabled people - parking bays
Disabled people - parking permits - blue badge
Licence - skip operator
Licence - street cafe
Licence - street trading
Red routes
Road safety - dangerous road junctions
Road safety - pedestrian crossings
Road safety - speed humps
Road signs
Roads - flooding - drains and gullies
Skip permits
Street name plates
Street parking - clamping and removal
Street parking - enforcement and fines
Street parking - permits
Street parking - zones
Street trading - illegal
Taxi rank provision
Yellow lines

Street furniture - provision and maintenance


Street furniture

Street furniture is provided and maintained by the City for the protection and convenience of pedestrians.

Posts are employed to fix regulatory and warning signs, although wherever possible signs are attached to buildings in order to minimise street clutter. As part of a City-wide wayfinding programme, new sign posts and “node points” have been erected throughout the City in order to aid pedestrians locating points of interest.

The street pattern of the City has changed little since the seventeenth century but unfortunately the traffic has. In order to protect pedestrians and the footway surfaces it is often necessary to position bollards on the kerb edge. These can vary from the traditional black and red "gun barrel" design (below), through to the more recent wooden and stainless steel designs.

Post
Post

Node point
Node point

Bollards
Bollards




Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional