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“Recipe for disaster” – Bournemouth cycle lane invites cyclists to ride between car doors and oncoming traffic

Council engineers cycled the route as part of safety assessment

A new Bournemouth cycle lane that directs cyclists the wrong way down a one-day street before ending at a row of parked cars has been criticised by campaigners. Cycling UK says the layout is an example of why the Government needs to adopt national design standards for cycling infrastructure.

The Bournemouth Echo has published photos of the painted lane on Curzon Road.

One motorist told the newspaper that she had narrowly avoided a collision with a cyclist coming towards her, describing the layout as ‘an accident waiting to happen’.

“It isn’t a lane, it’s a green strip directing cycles into the path of oncoming cars,” she said.

Sam Jones, Senior Campaigns Officer at Cycling UK, said: “Looking at these photos, this is a pretty dreadful and dangerous bit of planning, no matter the good intentions the council might have had.

“Due to parked cars on both sides and the narrowness of the road, anyone cycling along Curzon Road will face the dual perils of being car-doored and being placed into conflict with the oncoming traffic. Either way in its current format it looks like a recipe for disaster.

“It’s a perfect example why the Government must adopt national design standards for cycling infrastructure, rather than letting local authorities try to figure it out for themselves. Not only would it prevent dangerous design like this, but also it would prevent money being wasted.”

Jones said that contraflow lanes for cycling can and do work safely across the country, but only on roads wide enough to accommodate both a cyclist and a vehicle.

He added: “Looking at the narrowness of the road, currently people cycling will be forced to cycle very close to the parked cars on the left hand side of the picture. This runs contrary to all cycle training which teaches people cycling to give a wide berth of parked cars to prevent being car-doored.”

Richard Pearson, Bournemouth Borough Council’s highway design and road safety manager, said: “We implemented this scheme following requests from the local cycle forum who have indicated that they are satisfied with the arrangement.

“Engineers also undertook a safety assessment of this arrangement prior to proceeding including cycling the route.

“There are some additional signs still to be installed to highlight the presence of cyclists and we will monitor the safety performance of the route.

“The opening up of one-way streets into contraflow cycle routes is now common practice in the UK and local authorities are being actively encouraged by the Department for Transport to do this, as a result of new legislation which makes this more achievable by councils where suitable.

“Contraflow routes are designed to help directness of routes for cycling across the borough to encourage more people to leave motor vehicles at home for short trips where possible, especially school trips.”

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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19 comments

Avatar
canubra | 6 years ago
2 likes

Pretty much every one way road in the Netherlands is like this. The problem isn't with the idea, the problem will be with the acceptance of cyclists being allowed to 'break the rules'

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Bluebug | 6 years ago
1 like

Quote:

“Engineers also undertook a safety assessment of this arrangement prior to proceeding including cycling the route."

And they probably said it was a bad idea unless the road wasn't busy. The council muppets then told them the road wasn't really that used as it was a side road.

Quote:

“The opening up of one-way streets into contraflow cycle routes is now common practice in the UK and local authorities are being actively encouraged by the Department for Transport to do this, as a result of new legislation which makes this more achievable by councils where suitable.

However most councils who have implemented them aren't complete muppets and choose roads:

1. Where cars can park with four wheels on the road

2. There are marked parking spaces for cars meaning that the entire road doesn't have two lanes of cars parked on both sides, so if a car meets a cyclist or vice versa either one can easily get out of the way.

3. That aren't busy if the road is narrow.

Avatar
Cupov | 6 years ago
1 like

This kind of shit will hardly encourage the casual cyclist to 'nip to the shops' on their bike. And which idiot is heading up the local cycle forum??

Avatar
Stef Marazzi replied to Cupov | 6 years ago
1 like
Cupov wrote:

This kind of shit will hardly encourage the casual cyclist to 'nip to the shops' on their bike. And which idiot is heading up the local cycle forum??

These people: http://www.bournemouthcycleforum.co.uk/minutes-of-meetings/

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dodpeters | 6 years ago
1 like

It has worked really well in conjunction with serious restrictions on driving and presumed liability, but seems a bit optomistic without either of those.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 6 years ago
3 likes

Fucking morons.

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stenmeister | 6 years ago
2 likes

Belligerent response from the council. I wonder if the engineers who cycled it were seasoned cyclists?

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brooksby replied to stenmeister | 6 years ago
5 likes

stenmeister wrote:

Belligerent response from the council. I wonder if the engineers who cycled it were seasoned cyclists?

f

and which local cycling group will come forward as having been consulted/agreed to it...

Avatar
kil0ran | 6 years ago
7 likes

Dangerous for pedestrians too. One way street, only likely to be looking if a car is coming, despite the green paint

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Beecho replied to kil0ran | 6 years ago
4 likes

kil0ran wrote:

Dangerous for pedestrians too. One way street, only likely to be looking if a car is coming, despite the green paint

In all fairness to a few pedestrians, the direction of one way traffic tends to make little difference to which way they look, if indeed they bother at all.

Avatar
Kendalred | 6 years ago
4 likes

Made the mistake of looking at the comments section on the Bournemouth Echo website.  First anti-cyclist post out of 71 commnets? Number 2. Surprised it took two tbh!

No wonder Dave Gorman calls it (comment section) the 'bottom of the internet', as it's usually full of shit. And yes I do realise the irony of me saying this in an internet comments section!

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Kendalred | 6 years ago
0 likes

KendalRed wrote:

Made the mistake of looking at the comments section on the Bournemouth Echo website.  First anti-cyclist post out of 71 commnets? Number 2. Surprised it took two tbh!

No wonder Dave Gorman calls it (comment section) the 'bottom of the internet', as it's usually full of shit. And yes I do realise the irony of me saying this in an internet comments section!

"Dont forget to shave your legs before going out on your childrens toy to annoy drivers today. Youre no more than a car-hating half-man."

 

!!!!!!!!

Avatar
ConcordeCX replied to Hirsute | 6 years ago
2 likes

hirsute wrote:

KendalRed wrote:

Made the mistake of looking at the comments section on the Bournemouth Echo website.  First anti-cyclist post out of 71 commnets? Number 2. Surprised it took two tbh!

No wonder Dave Gorman calls it (comment section) the 'bottom of the internet', as it's usually full of shit. And yes I do realise the irony of me saying this in an internet comments section!

"Dont forget to shave your legs before going out on your childrens toy to annoy drivers today. Youre no more than a car-hating half-man."

 

!!!!!!!!

fantastic - Pulitzer Prize for that one!

I love the comments sections, even the Guardian's. They constantly surprise me because I can never quite believe how stupid people can be, but they always prove me wrong, and give me hope that The Cosmos will continue to supply  a never-ending cast of increasingly stupid Tories and Republicans to amuse jaded Metropolitan elitists such as votre humble serviteur. Vive les cons! Vive le vélo!

 

 

 

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CygnusX1 | 6 years ago
12 likes

Never mind the shit infrastructure (par for the course), what I want to know is why nobody seems able to paint a bike on the road with a standard diamond frame?

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brooksby | 6 years ago
4 likes

I don't really understand what the purpose of this actually was...  I would have thought far too many people would assume cyclists could/would only ride on the green paint and then, what?, get off and walk?  If the intention was to allow contraflow cycling on that road, then a simple entry point and signage - and some serious restrictions on where people could park their cars along that road - would have been better rather than a few metres of green paint. 

Avatar
Grahamd replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
5 likes

brooksby wrote:

I don't really understand what the purpose of this actually was...  I would have thought far too many people would assume cyclists could/would only ride on the green paint and then, what?, get off and walk?  If the intention was to allow contraflow cycling on that road, then a simple entry point and signage - and some serious restrictions on where people could park their cars along that road - would have been better rather than a few metres of green paint. 

It’s to lure cyclists into thinking it’s okay to cycle against the flow of traffic up one way streets. Undoubtedly this will be followed by a targeted police operation then fining cyclists and a media storm to follow.

 

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pruaga | 6 years ago
4 likes

Maybe it was meant to go all the way along the road as a contraflow but the builders couldn't finish it because of the parked cars?  

Although, that wouldn't change the net outcome, would just mean that cars would have a nice bit of green tarmac to park on.

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HarrogateSpa | 6 years ago
5 likes

I'm not in favour of crap cycling infrastructure. In this case, might it not be useful to be allowed to ride up this otherwise one-way road?

People should drive slowly and carefully on this residential street, because there are lots of parked cars, and the possibility of someone stepping out to cross the road. If they do so, and I realise it's a big if, it should be easy enough for a person on a bike to negotiate their way past a vehicle coming the other way.

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Zjtm231 | 6 years ago
8 likes

Speachless.
The worst part of this is that money that has been set a side for cycling infrastructure has been utterly wasted on this sh#t

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