Punkawallah
Veteran
From Facebook:
Don't..... A colleague mentioned what's going on in our local village with a new bike lane. The council haven't consulted anyone, as usual, and all the cyclists on the 'village' facebook page have said they won't use it. Basically, the road can't be widened as it's narrow, so they are painting the pavement - the cycle lane will run past a 'bar' and a supermarket - so puts cyclists in direct path of pedestrians. It literally runs for about 150 yards. It's a total waste as it's a short stretch of road that's too narrow to be altered, and then it links into some back roads (which I use sometimes) which is a cycle route, although you have to get back onto the road anyway for another 300 yards as there is a narrow railway bridge. Far safer to be on the road as traffic isn't moving above 20 mph.
PS I didn't know about the road works as I avoid the village at most times, even in the car. Too busy !
It’s a cycling lay-by for breaking long journeys up.
It depends when it was built (newer ones are more likely to be deep enough that cyclists can re-enter the carriageway at right-angles) and whether the designers and builders had a farking clue what they were doing. All too often, the initial design is OK (probably copied from a manual) and then someone objects to the amount of land being tarmacked or the cost or something and "we can't go all the way for cycling this time" (really? When did most councils ever?) or "the budget means we have to make compromises" (really? What tiny fraction of the motor transport budget has cycling got?) and it gets cut-down and botched like this. If the auditors are worth their salt, the stage 3 audit will then flag what's been built as unsafe, it'll be scheduled for remedial work at some future date and left to rot because they decide there's no point resurfacing or even spraying weedkiller on something that they might dig up in 3 months. Grrrrr!That's kind of what I thought. It's not to travel along the road but to position the cyclist to cross the road. However, they are usually a bit longer than that and deeper to the side so you can turn and get straight for crossing over.
The council probably have consulted someone. One person. The cabinet member for transport, which is usually a councillor with strange ideas about transport from some faraway place appointed by the council leader, who probably has strange ideas on transport and is elected by the councillors, most of who have strange ideas on transport.Don't..... A colleague mentioned what's going on in our local village with a new bike lane. The council haven't consulted anyone, as usual,
Well, that annoys me. Firstly, it's irrelevant and will be dismissed because the council can say that this is to get more people cycling, not to please the hardnuts willing to put up with the current rubbish road designs. But more because it would be better to say what they should be doing, not just say no-no-no.and all the cyclists on the 'village' facebook page have said they won't use it.
If the traffic isn't moving above 20mph, then it sounds like it would make more sense to put a 20mph limit and wide advisory (dashed) cycle lanes on both sides of the road. Is anyone suggesting that? And if the road is narrow, they should also remove the centre line.Basically, the road can't be widened as it's narrow, so they are painting the pavement - the cycle lane will run past a 'bar' and a supermarket - so puts cyclists in direct path of pedestrians. It literally runs for about 150 yards. It's a total waste as it's a short stretch of road that's too narrow to be altered, and then it links into some back roads (which I use sometimes) which is a cycle route, although you have to get back onto the road anyway for another 300 yards as there is a narrow railway bridge. Far safer to be on the road as traffic isn't moving above 20 mph.
Don't..... A colleague mentioned what's going on in our local village with a new bike lane. The council haven't consulted anyone, as usual, and all the cyclists on the 'village' facebook page have said they won't use it. Basically, the road can't be widened as it's narrow, so they are painting the pavement - the cycle lane will run past a 'bar' and a supermarket - so puts cyclists in direct path of pedestrians. It literally runs for about 150 yards. It's a total waste as it's a short stretch of road that's too narrow to be altered, and then it links into some back roads (which I use sometimes) which is a cycle route, although you have to get back onto the road anyway for another 300 yards as there is a narrow railway bridge. Far safer to be on the road as traffic isn't moving above 20 mph.
PS I didn't know about the road works as I avoid the village at most times, even in the car. Too busy !
The problem around here is that any infrastructure project that requires breaking new ground requires: archeology survey, ecology survey, environmental impact assessment, flood risk analysis, bat survey etc. on top of any traffic survey/analysis and a raft of compliance checks. It's probably much cheaper to modify existing bits - just need a stencil, white paint and the odd sign or at most some different coloured tarmac and the council can tick another box.