Very careful measurement of angles is required
This is a local hill about 35% grade, and no I have not yet ridden up it, down it yes
I was impressed by the picture of your very steep looking hill in Hobart, but on careful inspection and after measurements of the angles in your photo I have come to the conclusion that the portion of the hill which you show is not 35% but close to 20% or 1 in 5.
As I posted earlier in this thread,
Flecc's method of taking a photo of roadside building works well: relying on the builder to have used a good level to lay his bricks is an excellent method to get a spot reading of the gradient. The picture needs to be taken square on to the roadside building to avoid distortions which would result in errors.
Here is what I got when I measured the angles using photoshop:
I have assumed that the builder constructing the white house used an accurate spirit level to make the window frame and the horizontal planks exactly horizontal. We see that at the eave level the angle is -1.3 deg, the cross bar of the window frame -3.4 deg, the window cill -5.2 deg, and the plank visible near the ground -5.9 deg. There is clearly some distortion or skewing in this photograph, since if measured with a spirit level we would expect all these angles to be the same.
I have made two estimates for the slope of the hill:
Using the handrail slope: I have measurements of -17.9 deg and -16.8 deg, which gives an average of 17.35 deg. but the window cill which intersects this line gives -5.2 deg, so the handrail slopes at 12.15 deg relative to the window cill. This gives a handrail gradient of tan(12.15) = 19.3%.
Using the road kerb slope: I have measurements of -19.1 deg and -18.7 deg which give an average of -18.9 deg. Noting that the skew increases as one moves towards the bottom of the picture I have taken the horizontal to be the -5.9 deg at the bottom plank and assume it would change to -6.1 deg a little lower in the picture. This now gives the angle of the kerb relative to the horizontal to be -13.0 deg and the gradient of the hill is tan(13)= 20.7%.
I then took the average of these two estimations of the gradient and concluded that this portion of the hill is 20% or a much more rideable 1 in 5!