Hi all,
Thank you very much for your comments and suggestions. A few brief responses:
- no, this is not a windup!
- Bradley Stoke Way does get thin in places (~1m), but a stretch recently redone further up is (at a guess) 3m wide.
- I did state clearly that I would not feel safe on the road - thanks to WheelyGoodFun for pointing this out, and for the 10 or so recommendations to use the road!

I average about 12mph on a good day and less up the hills, so I think I'm less of a danger on the shared-use path for the time being.
- Shared paths are indeed "
shared use". I would respectfully argue that if pedestrians are in groups and are taking up the whole width, then they are
not "sharing". If a local cycling club routinely cycled up there, taking up the whole path, I don't imagine that the peds would be happy?
- Thanks to Spinney and WheelyGoodFun again for pointing out that my primary concern was the safety of the children from quicker and less considerate cyclists than me. I wont deny that if the path was shared more effectively that my commute would be easier and more pleasant, but this wasn't my primary concern.
- Thank you to SummerDays for praising me for contacting them. I'm a believer in politely making a case and that numbers speak volume. If I alone ask for something considered to be a 'grossely unrealistic expectation' then I'm unlikely to be successful, but if the council are getting 3 letters a day then they are much more likely to do something about it. It costs nothing but time to make your opinion politely known, and I think the world is a sadder place when people don't even try.
- Most of my suggestions were deliberately cheap - signs and paint. Honestly, I am not convinced that this will solve the problem (I even say "It wont solve the problem"). You have to start small though!
I think I've addressed everything (sorry if I'm not referred to your specific post - there was a lot of them!) - comments welcome.
I've also had this further response from South Glos Council - included as promised.
Thankyou for your email about this route which has just been passed to me as the designer of this and other routes in the area.
I sympathise with your problem and will try to explain the rationale. The issue is fairly widespread. In some places where the flow of pedestrians and cyclists is constantly high, the solution is usually to segregate the path. This is often the requirement near busy train stations or town centre locations.
However, in locations where there are peaks and troughs in flows it is often best to leave the path unsegregated. This allows the full width to be utilised most of the time by whoever happens to be moving along it rather than being confined to one half all of the time.
This allows family groups to walk or ride next to each other in a more sociable convivial atmosphere rather than in a line behind each other.
The ‘shared-use’ idea works well in Bradley Stoke Way most of the day – except at school leaving time. In other locations around South Gloucestershire we have retained a segregated layout, eg. outside Filton High School and Abbey Wood Station clearly divided marked with lines and signs. This still results with either school pupils drifting over the line near the school or in some cases, cyclists going far too fast for the conditions at busy times leading to some train passengers walking to Abbey Wood referring to the path as ‘The Velodrome’ due to the way the segregation line is treated as a license to pedal at full speed. This effect can be reduced if the path is very wide and segregated, but often there isn’t the width available.
The solution given no restrictions is a completely separate path network for pedestrians and cyclists or a separate lane within the carriageway. In Bradley Stoke Way (and most of the surrounding area) there isn’t the physical space to accommodate this so we have to compromise. Therefore most design guidance suggests that the best compromise given the width (3m in this case) and the general conditions and usage that a clearly marked shared-use arrangement is the most suitable.
Hopefully with the predicted increase in cycling along this route once it has been fitted with proper direction/location signs to Aztec West & Parkway Station etc that pedestrians will become more aware of cyclists regularly approaching and ready to move over(currently bicycles are very outnumbered)but I am happy to review the situation when the whole network is completed.
Forgive my slightly long-winded response but its is something that I have considered over a long period of experience in different locations around the UK and studies elsewhere.
Thanks,
MG