Within London, Moylan has promoted new approaches to streetscape drawn principally from the Dutch "shared space" concept developed by
Hans Monderman. These resulted in a redesign of
Kensington High Street soon after Moylan became deputy leader of the Council in 2000. One aim of this was to rationalise street furniture and create a more pedestrian-friendly environment, and to achieve this Moylan had to reject professional advice and transfer the risks of the project onto himself and other councillors, after detailed consideration of the public safety risks. Plans for a similar improvement of
Sloane Square in Chelsea proved controversial and were shelved in 2007, after a campaign against them, but a clutter-free redesign of
Exhibition Road, in London's museums district, was achieved in 2012. In 2009, Boris Johnson appointed Moylan to chair the Mayor's Design Advisory Panel, with responsibility for delivering the Mayor's vision for the public realm as set out in his "Great Outdoors" policy statement. Until he left these roles in June 2012, Moylan oversaw many improvements to highways and parks around the capital, including the restoration of
Piccadilly and
St James's Street to two-way traffic. In 2011 Moylan was appointed as Chairman of the
London Legacy Development Corporation, He replaced the Labour peer
Lady Ford, and was formally opposed by the Labour/Green majority on the
London Assembly. He made significant changes to the leadership of the organisation, which were not welcomed by the longer-serving Board members. In September 2012, Johnson himself took over as Chairman of LLDC, so that Moylan could focus on promoting their policy on a new London airport. == Airport Service Advisor ==