And you're not bound to be against cycle lanes and tracks?
No. If there is evidence they work at significantly increasing safety or attracting people to cycling I would support them. But so far I have found little to no evidence they do either. They do cost a lot of money though at about £1m/mile.
Did you even read the quote from Paul Gannon?
Yes. And? Its just a diatribe full of aspersions and assertions with no evidence base. Paul, like David, is committed to segregation being the solution.
And since you seem to have a knack to conflate issues, why stop now, what about the studies showing that spending on cycling infrastructure has returns somewhere between 3-to-1 and 9-to-1 if memory serves?
Link?
Anyway, rate of cycling in Finland is something like 5 times higher than UK, which IMO is even more impressive when you consider 3 months of snow. (There was another detail that makes the figure even more impressive but it escapes me.) Finland has significant cycling infrastructure separated from cars. It is clear to me that cycling infrastructure is necessary, though not sufficient, condition for number of people cycling, and the number of studies saying the same thing strongly supports that. And yes, I know it'll never satisfy your demands for conclusive proof (though I find it oddly convenient you're also against spending any money to actually build such infrastructure which could be studied to your satisfaction.)
That is just your conjecture. Perhaps you can cite some of those studies you talk about. The reason I don't want to spend money building that infrastructure to be studied is because its already been done in lots of places and cycling either stayed static or fell.
The DfT carried out a ten year study in 8 towns and cities to "measure and evaluate the effect of providing a continuous cycle route or network, particularly on cyclists' safety and cycle use" (Traffic Advisory Leaflet 5/95). It found
"Constructing safe routes did not of itself encourage those who own cycles - but do not currently us them - to start cycling."
"In Exeter, Kempston, Stockton, and parts of Nottingham, the introduction of cycle routes led to a fall in the number of people who considered cycling to be dangerous.
There was no correlation between the perception of the danger of cycling and the changes in observed cycle flows. Overall there was no change in the number of cyclist casualties in the towns studied."
Dublin built a 320km commuter cycling network and saw a 15% drop in commuter cycling and a 40% drop in cycling to school. The Netherlands saw no cycling increase in return for spending ~ $1Bn on cycle tracks, neither did Germany. How many more of these "experiments" do we need to spend money on?
Do you have any studies proving cycling in Finland is abnormally unsafe because of the cycling infrastructure? Do you have any studies besides the bunked Helsinki report even suggesting that?
Cyclists cycling against the traffic flow on a two way cycle lane have a 12.4x (Sweden), 10x (Finland) increased collision risk compared to on the road and 3.4x (Sweden) and 4x (Denmark) higher risk in the with traffic direction.
Rasanen M, Summala H, Pasanen E, The safety effect of sight obstacles and road markings at bicycle crossings Traffic Engineering and Control, 39(2), 98-102, 1998
Rasanen M, Summala H, Attention and expectation problems in bicycle-car collisions: an in-depth study. Accid Anal. Prev.30(5):657-66. 1998