Transport in the Isle of Man

There are a number of transport services around the Isle of Man, mostly consisting of paved roads, public transport, rail services, sea ports and an airport.

Roads

Overview map of transport links in the Isle of Man

The island has a total of 688 miles (1,107 km) of public roads,[1] all of which are paved. Roads are numbered using a numbering scheme similar to the numbering schemes of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; each road is assigned a letter, which represents the road's category, followed by a 1 or 2 digit number. A roads are the main roads of the island whilst roads labelled B, C, D or U decrease in size and/or quality. (The C, D and U numbers are not marked on most maps or on signposts.) There is no national speed limit - some roads may be driven at any speed which is safe and appropriate. Careless and dangerous driving laws still apply, so one may not drive at absolutely any speed, and there are local speed limits on many roads. Many unrestricted roads have frequent bends which even the most experienced driver cannot see round. Measured travel speeds (see table below) are often relatively low. Drivers are limited to 50 miles per hour (80 km/h) in the first two years after passing their driving test (Isle of Man citizens are permitted to start driving at the age of sixteen)[2] and some are not used to having to make progress in the same way as on a larger road network such as that in the UK: even a cautious driver can get from anywhere in the island to anywhere else in ninety minutes).

Set against this is a strong culture of motor sport enthusiasm (pinnacled in the TT, but there are many events during the year) and many residents familiar with the roads are well used to traversing country roads at speeds illegal on similar roads elsewhere. This leads to a very diverse spread of both driving competence and speed. In an official survey in 2006 the introduction of blanket speed limits was refused by the population,[3] suggesting that a large number appreciate the freedom.

There is a comprehensive bus network, operated by Bus Vannin, a department of the Isle of Man Government, with most routes originating or terminating in Douglas.

Isle of Man travel speeds[4]
Measurement site Speed limit
(mph)
85% percentile Measurement dates
EastboundWestbound
Ballafreer House, Main Road, Marown No limit 4647 2005 (27 June – 4 July)
Main Road, Baldrine 30 3636 2005 (21–28 November)
Glen Mona, Maughold No limit 3842 2005 (26 Sept – 3 Oct)
Ballamodha Straight, Malew 40 5150 2006 (6–13 March)
Ballacobb, Ballaugh No limit 5140 2006 (3–10 July)
Richmond Hill, Douglas (by bus stop) 50 5550 2006 (24 April – 1 May)
Outside Limekilns Farm, Shore Road, Rushen No limit 4950 2004 (2–8 August)
Windy Corner, Onchan No limit 5457 2006 (17–24 July)

Railways

The island has a total of 68.5 km (42.6 mi) of railway. There are seven separate public rail or tram systems on the island:

RailwayLocationApprox.
length
(km)
TrackMain
propulsion
method
Gauge
(inches)
Operation
(days per week)
(Seasonal)
Operated by
Isle of Man RailwayDouglas - Port Erin25SingleSteam367Department of Infrastructure
Manx Electric RailwayDouglas - Ramsey27DoubleElectric
Snaefell Mountain RailwayLaxey - Snaefell Summit8DoubleElectric42
Douglas Horse TramDouglas Promenade3DoubleEquine36Douglas Borough Council
Groudle Glen RailwayGroudle Glen,
Lonan and Onchan
1SingleSteam241 or 2Groudle Glen Railway (2012) Limited
Great Laxey Mine RailwayLaxey0.4SingleSteam191Laxey & Lonan Heritage Trust
The Orchid LineCurraghs Wildlife Park,
Ballaugh
0.6SingleSteam7.25Manx Steam & Model Engineering Club

(The last three are short-distance tourist rides which cannot be said to be transport services.)

All of these routes are seasonal.

Airports

The only commercial airport on the island is the Isle of Man Airport at Ronaldsway. Scheduled services operate to and from various cities in the United Kingdom and Ireland, operated by several different airlines.[5]

The island's other paved runways are at Jurby and Andreas. Jurby remains in Isle of Man Government ownership and is used for motorsport events and, previously, airshows, while Andreas is privately owned and used by a local glider club. The old Hall Caine Airport, a grass field near Ramsey, is no longer used.

Aircraft Register

The Isle of Man Aircraft Register became operational on 1 May 2007. The register is open to all non-commercial aircraft and is intended to be of particular interest to professionally flown corporate operators. As of November 2012 a total of 537 corporate and private aircraft had been registered.

Ports and harbours

There are ports at Castletown, Douglas, Peel, Port St Mary and Ramsey. Douglas is served by frequent ferries to/from England and occasional ferries to/from Ireland; the sole operator is the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company, with exclusive use of the Isle of Man Sea Terminal and the Douglas port linkspans under the conditions of the user agreement with the Isle of Man Government.

Merchant marine

The Isle of Man register comprises 226 ships of 1,000 GRT or over, totalling 6,055,436 GRT or 9,972,459 tonnes deadweight (DWT). This figure includes some foreign-owned ships registered on the Island as a flag of convenience: Australia, 3; Cyprus, 4; Denmark, 30; Estonia, 3; France, 1; Germany, 57; Greece, 8; Hong Kong, 11; Iceland, 1; Italy, 6; Monaco, 4; Netherlands, 2; New Zealand, 1; Norway, 10; Singapore, 2; Sweden, 3; United Kingdom, 80; United States, 1.

A breakdown of ships by type: bulk, 25; cargo, 40; chemical tanker, 25; combination bulk, 2; container, 19; liquefied gas, 31; multi-functional large load carrier, 1; petroleum tanker, 59; refrigerated cargo, 1; roll on/roll off, 17; specialised tanker, 1; vehicle carrier, 5.

References

  1. "Everything you ever wanted to know about the Isle of Man". Isleofman Dot Com Ltd. Archived from the original on 25 February 2008. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  2. "Driving licences". Isle of Man Government. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  3. "Islanders reject speed limit plan". BBC News. 20 June 2006. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  4. "Transport Implications of the Isle of Man Strategic Plan: Report" (PDF). JMP Consulting. 27 April 2007. Retrieved 26 September 2008.
  5. "Flight destinations and timetables". Isle of Man Government. 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
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