Elderly Cyclist Killed Crossing M32 Slip Road

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Bristolian

Über Member
Location
Bristol, UK
https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/cyclist-80s-dies-after-m32-10820407

An 80 year old cyclist was killed in a collision with a car driver yesterday (17 Feb 2026) morning whilst crossing the on slip ramp (Jct 1 / A4174 & M32). Details are scarce at this point in time but my thoughts are with the deceased's family and friends. The road was closed for most of the day and Police are asking for dash cam footage and eye witness statements.

The crossing here was slightly redesigned recently as part of the construction of a new, segregated cycle & footway and is far from ideal. There have been a number of complaints about the layout and the green painted surface on the cycle path - it's flippin' slippery when wet. Additionally, drivers heading up onto the motorway from the A4174 have their view of the crossing partially blocked by temporary road signs. From an elderly cyclists point of view, the cycle way actually runs parallel to the slip road approach for about 10m meaning you have to be able to look around 180 degrees (not always easy for the elderly) on the approach to the lights to see if there's any traffic coming.
 

wiggydiggy

Legendary Member
I HATE crossing sliproads and will actively avoid them anytime I can. I was looking at the junction and it does at least have a light controlled crossing, is that still there after the re-design?

Also its the sliproad onto the motorway, I find people are more concerned with putting their foot down onto the motorway than considering someone that might be trying to cross it.

https://maps.app.goo.gl/GkMXYQGHjU45iCPy8
 

mjr

Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
I dislike this PC reporting.

The collision was done unto him, and he was the victim. He himself was not in collision with anything.
This reporting isn't politically correct, or any sort of correct. They should follow the road collision reporting guidelines. https://RC-rg.com

I wonder if this will trigger any sort of improvements in slip road crossings and how long it will take. I cross two on my most -used route, but both are bidirectional beg button crossings adjacent to the roundabout. There are "uncontrolled" (aka rush and pray) crossings at other junctions but I rarely ride them and primary cycle routes have been diverted to avoid them.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
If you read mjr's link (or go straight to this: https://www.rc-rg.com/_files/ugd/c05c10_52e505e930eb4836900c640a447c7ee0.pdf ) it's jammed full of "collision".

It's a perfectly good word for many/most situations.

I've no issue with the word collision.

My issue is with the phrase "was in collision with".

He wasnt in collision with anything. Something else collided with him. It was done unto him.
 
My issue is with the phrase "was in collision with".

A collision involves two or more things. the CO prefix is a very standard thing in English (dunno where it's from originally, sorry!). It does not mean that one of the things is DOING any more than the others - although of course that may be the case.
Cohere
Cooperate
coalesce
coauthor

Take 5 slightly different phrases:
- They were in a collision
- They collided
- A collided with B
- B was in a collision with A
- B collided with A
ALL MEAN THE SAME THING. If you wanted to mean something else - like the car/tree example above - you would use a different word: "The teenager drove into the stationary tree."

The WITH is pretty important too:"A danced with B" "B danced with A" both mean the same. "A forced B to dance" would mean something different.

Finally, here's the pure definition. If you have a citation that shows another meaning, hit me:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision
a collision is any event in which two or more bodies exert forces on each other in a relatively short time.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
With respect Mr M, that's pedantry.

We all know exacftly what I mean. The old boy didn't die because he himself walked, ran or sprinted into something.

No, it because a motor vehicle smacked into the poor feller, and the neutral wording in the story suggest he was an equal and willing participant in the coming together of two physical masses.
 
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