Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Poor roads, bad driving & theft deter Reading cyclists, council admits before rolling out excuses for inaction

Streets too narrow, buses too important, to allocate road space to cyclists, say councillors

A survey of Reading residents ahead of the release of town’s 2014 cycling strategy has revealed that badly-maintained roads, lack of cycling infrastructure, poor driving and theft deter people from riding bikes in the town.

But councillors say that Reading’s narrow streets and the popularity of buses as mode of transport mean there is little they can do to encourage cycling.

The council received 349 responses to its online consultation, and another 19 detailed responses.

According to GetReading’s David Millward, regular cyclists called for better road maintenance, better lighting and more separated cycle routes. Non-cyclists raised concerns about cyclists ignoring red lights, cycling on pavements and inconsiderate behaviour.

High-quality cycling infrastructure would of course deal with all these problems, but Reading council doesn’t see it that way.

At a meeting of the council’s strategic environment, planning and transport committee, councillor Tony Page said  the council was restricted with what it could do because of the town’s narrow roads.

He said: “We have to balance the interests of all road users and I particularly draw colleagues’ attention to figures which indicate the huge reliance on buses for journeys into the town centre.

“At the moment, cyclists only constitute three per cent and even if you double that it’s still only six per cent. The dominant and most popular mode of transport is our public transport.”

Reading’s cycling strategy aims for 2,300 additional cycle trips every day by April 2015, and doubling the percentage of people cycling to work in the next five years.

The plans also include an increase in cycle parking spaces, with a  doubling of cycle parking at Reading Station by opening a new Cycle Parking Hub by Autumn 2014 and a review of existing and potential new cycle routes - including signage - to make travelling between routes easier for cyclists.

A Boris Bike-style cycle hire scheme, ReadyBike, was launched at the end January. In UK towns and cities smaller than London, lack of cycling infrastructure and small populations mean these systems have almost universally failed to attract enough users to be viable.

But there’s no hint of allocating road space to cyclists if it inconveniences other road users. For example, the strategy includes “investigating opportunities to improve road lay outs - including advanced stop lines” but there’s a big caveat: “where there is sufficient width and lane capacity is not reduced.”

Liberal Democrat councillor Ricky Duveen said: “I would like to draw attention to the accident figures in the report.

“Cycling accounts for three per cent of journeys, but we can see from the chart they account for 25 per cent of the accidents.

“One of the main barriers to stop people cycling is people don’t feel safe because of the layout of the roads we have inherited, where it’s not always possible to separate cyclists from traffic or from pedestrians.

“We don’t necessarily want to promote one form of transport over the other, but at the moment we give priority to cars and I think we could do ourselves a huge favour at a stroke by reducing the allowable speed from 30mph to 20mph on our roads.”

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

Add new comment

21 comments

Avatar
nicdoye | 10 years ago
0 likes

Thank God it's my last week of commuting into Reading. My office is on Vastern Road and the new East-bound section is a joke - the bus/cycle lane is the right lane! Westbound, the cycle path (pavement) ends abruptly saying "rejoin carriageway" which is the 3 lanes and approaches one of the most dangerous roundabouts it has been my displeasure to use (hint: don't use it).

Avatar
Bob's Bikes | 10 years ago
0 likes

Councillor Tony Page said...... Cyclists only constitute three per cent and even if you double that it’s still only six per cent.

Good to know he can count maybe that's the only thing he's good at?

Avatar
CStar | 10 years ago
0 likes

On the plus side, there is so much new development going on South of Reading, that within 3-5 years it will be complete gridlock anyway, so the only sensible way to travel around will be by bike. I regularly travel through Wokingham and Winnersh and pass lines and lines of cars going nowhere. Smugingham BC's approach is to let the roads get into such a poor state that they are completely unsuitable for any cycling other than on a MTB. This way they can avoid having to worry about cycling and can continue simply to build more houses.

Avatar
jimmyd | 10 years ago
0 likes

I'm a Reading Cyclist and Motorist, and frankly it's bad for everyone - even those of Buses.

Generally the people in charge of the roads in the council are Morons and have no idea what they are doing.

I only survive Cycling in Reading as I have local knowledge and quite a few Towpaths I can travel down to avoid traffic.

RBC are also anti car. I remember about 15 years ago now, they changed the main Southerly route out of the town(A327) from 3 cars lanes to one with lots of parking either side, bigger pavements, a underused Bus lane and wasted spaces full of hatching.

If you want further proof just Google 'Shinfield road roundabouts' and you'll see what their attitude is to the taxpayers.

Trust me when I say these guys can't even be trusted to look after a bee in a jar!!

Avatar
stenmeister | 10 years ago
0 likes

I used to live in Reading and Cemetery Junction in the east of the town was quite scary but the Thames canal path was superb. There are ways around town without reverting to main roads and demanding for cycle lanes.

Avatar
Neil753 | 10 years ago
0 likes

What's the collective term for ineffectual councilors?

At least there's a hint of a 20mph limit. Add in a few bollards to create quietways, get people to understand that a month's bus fares would pay for a 2nd hand town bike, and things start to change. It's not rocket science, and the popularity of the bus service is the lamest of excuses.

Avatar
jacknorell replied to Neil753 | 10 years ago
0 likes
Neil753 wrote:

What's the collective term for ineffectual councilors?

Easy... it's "councilors".

Avatar
Simon_MacMichael replied to jacknorell | 10 years ago
0 likes
jacknorell wrote:
Neil753 wrote:

What's the collective term for ineffectual councilors?

Easy... it's "councilors".

In the UK, its "councillors"  3

Avatar
Mountainboy | 10 years ago
0 likes

That's what our executive member for transport said in WsM, "we haven't put any effort into improving this horrific junction because very few people choose to cycle across it"!

I may have misquoted him slightly, but the meaning is there...

Avatar
P3t3 | 10 years ago
0 likes

I cycle across Reading twice every day.

The council haven't got a clue and Tony Page is a big obstruction to cycling in Reading.

The town is choking on cars but nobody seems to understand that a relatively small modal shift to bikes would radically change that. The argument that the streets are narrow is total nonsense, most of Reading's streets are huge, the town got bombed flat in the war so there is loads of room. Its just that the town has a legacy of town centre road building that the council can't seem to move on from. Being the only reliable crossing of the Thames for a few miles doesn't help but the council have no strategy for removing or dealing with the through traffic - it makes them obsessed with traffic problems but they will never get away from that without providing credible alternatives.

One of the major problems is that the town is cut in half by Thames and the railway line, which have only 2 crossing points which are terribly hostile to bikes. 5 minutes on the back of an envelope reveals how one of the crossing points could be completely tamed very cheaply (and it does link to lots of traffic free routes) but the council missed this opportunity when they re-furbished the station approaches.

The recently renewed Vastern road across the front of the new station entrance is a typical example, its about 40 metres wide. We could have had a nice boulevard, or good quality cycle infrastructure leading to the station and building out from that, but the council insisted on making concrete desert, 4 lanes of car traffic and big pavements, then making the pavement shared use as an afterthought. They couldn't have done a worse job if they had tried!

In the past there have been patches of very high quality infrastructure built in Reading but whatever policy put them in has very definitely been reversed in recent times.

Avatar
qwerky replied to P3t3 | 10 years ago
0 likes
P3t3 wrote:

The council haven't got a clue and Tony Page is a big obstruction to cycling in Reading.

The recently renewed Vastern road across the front of the new station entrance is a typical example, its about 40 metres wide. We could have had a nice boulevard, or good quality cycle infrastructure leading to the station and building out from that, but the council insisted on making concrete desert, 4 lanes of car traffic and big pavements, then making the pavement shared use as an afterthought. They couldn't have done a worse job if they had tried!

In the past there have been patches of very high quality infrastructure built in Reading but whatever policy put them in has very definitely been reversed in recent times.

I work in Reading and commute in (almost) every day. Totally agree with what you say. Tony Page is well known for investing in buses and not giving a damn about cycling (http://humancyclist.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/the-only-real-obstacle-to-dut...). His motivations might become more obvious when you realise that he used to be chairman of Reading Buses.

The Vastern Road debarcle is telling. There are two lanes in both directions, a 5m wide central reservation and also wide footpaths on both sides. This road was totally redeveloped as part of the station upgrade. Any cycle lanes added? No, but despite Reading's roads being really narrow Tony *did* manage to squeeze in a bus lane.

Avatar
benb | 10 years ago
0 likes

Hardly anyone cycles because it's not subjectively safe.
But no point investing in infrastructure because hardly anyone cycles!

That's basically their logic.

Avatar
A V Lowe | 10 years ago
0 likes

OK Reading - 25% of RTC's involve cyclists - but only 3% of modal split.

Seems that you really should be fulfilling your statutory obligation under Section 39(3) RTA 1988 and "Carrying out investigations into road traffic collisions" with a view to addressing this disparity. Maybe you can publish the reports you have done (as required by law) to date?

Any Reading cyclist care to do an FoI on this one?

Avatar
johndonnelly replied to A V Lowe | 10 years ago
0 likes
A V Lowe wrote:

OK Reading - 25% of RTC's involve cyclists - but only 3% of modal split.

Seems that you really should be fulfilling your statutory obligation under Section 39(3) RTA 1988 and "Carrying out investigations into road traffic collisions" with a view to addressing this disparity. Maybe you can publish the reports you have done (as required by law) to date?

Any Reading cyclist care to do an FoI on this one?

Will do.

Avatar
mrmo | 10 years ago
0 likes

simple question time, Who owns Readings buses? what is the income/cost,

Would the minor detail of councillors self interest cause any bias in how they see competing methods of transport?

Avatar
jamtartman | 10 years ago
0 likes

The Peoples Republic of Reading see all personal modes of transport as a threat to their authority. To control and monitor the movement of the population, you must force them onto the state controlled transport system - Reading Borough Council owns the bus company.

Avatar
Gashead | 10 years ago
0 likes

I have very limited experience of cycling through Reading i.e. once from east to west. Much of it was on a dedicated, segregated cycle lane integrated into the wide pavements. Usual errant pedestrians and white vans parked but generally I was impressed.

Avatar
Doctor Fegg | 10 years ago
0 likes

"In UK towns and cities smaller than London"

That'll be all of them then...

Avatar
Cheesyclimber | 10 years ago
0 likes

What the hell is up with the comments system on the GetReading? I've looked through and I can't see any mentions of road tax, cyclists jumping red lights or people wanting to mow them down...

Avatar
notfastenough replied to Cheesyclimber | 10 years ago
0 likes
thelimopit wrote:

What the hell is up with the comments system on the GetReading? I've looked through and I can't see any mentions of road tax, cyclists jumping red lights or people wanting to mow them down...

How strange, all the comments are sensible!!  13 If this is some new BS filtering system, the Daily Mail should be forced to buy one...

Avatar
johndonnelly replied to notfastenough | 10 years ago
0 likes
notfastenough wrote:
thelimopit wrote:

What the hell is up with the comments system on the GetReading? I've looked through and I can't see any mentions of road tax, cyclists jumping red lights or people wanting to mow them down...

How strange, all the comments are sensible!!  13 If this is some new BS filtering system, the Daily Mail should be forced to buy one...

The same filter can be used to filter for and only allow BS. Perhaps they have it already.

Latest Comments