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Motor traffic journey times increase after Kensington cycle lanes removed

Bike Is Best's analysis also finds that cars are parked in former cycle lanes for up to 80 per cent of the time...

Computer analysis of Transport for London (TfL) traffic cameras on Kensington High Street shows that congestion has worsened since the local council removed emergency bike lanes at the start of last month.

The Guardian reports campaign group Bike is Best as saying that following the removal of the lanes, average trip times on a 1.1-mile stretch of the road rose from 5 minutes 39 seconds to 8 minutes 14 seconds for motor traffic travelling eastbound, while westbound traffic saw an increase from 5 minutes 48 seconds to 6 minutes 27 seconds.

The group, whose members include leading cycling brands, retailers and organisations, also found that cars and other vehicles are illegally parked in one of the former cycle lanes for up to 80 per cent of the time.

> Bike Is Best: UK bike industry to launch major campaign to get people cycling as bike sales soar

The cycle lanes, one on each side of the high street and with segregation provided by plastic wands, had only been in place for seven weeks when the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea announced at the end of November that it planned to remove them.

Despite protests by teachers, parents and pupils at a nearby school, supported by cycling and environmental campaigners, the council proceeded to remove the lanes in early December, with Mayor of London Sadiq Khan condemning the decision and Prime Minister Boris Johnson said to have gone “ballistic” at their removal.

> “Shameful, callous and retrograde”: 200 join protest against removal of Kensington High Street cycle lanes

The council’s lead member for transport, Councillor Johnny Thalissites, said at the time: “The cycle lane was a trial scheme to help those hopping on bikes during lockdowns and encourage shoppers to the High Street. Businesses and residents have told us loud and clear that they believe the experiment has not worked. We are listening.

“By removing the temporary lanes as lockdown lifts, we hope to help get the High Street moving again and give our local economy the best possible chance of a good December.”

Bike Is Best’s analysis, however, suggests that the borough’s optimism that removing the cycle lanes would benefit motorists by removing congestion was misplaced, however.

The group said that in the week commencing 21 December – the day after London moved from Tier 2 to Tier 4 restrictions – parked vehicles blocked the former eastbound cycle lane for 63.6 per cent of the time. On 29 December, that rose to 81.6 per cent of the time between 7am and 7pm.

From 14-18 December – when the capital was still subject to the more relaxed Tier 2 restrictions – the lane had been blocked by parked cars for 52.9 per cent of the time.

The cycle lanes ran, with some gaps, from near Olympia at the western end of the High Street to just past the Royal Albert Hall in the east, from where riders could enter Hyde Park and continue along Cycleway 3.

Moreover, in response to a Freedom of Information request from Bike is Best  asking how the council had assessed whether or not the cycle lanes were working, the council admitted: “No criteria or metrics were developed by which the scheme was to be assessed.”

Bike Is Best founder Adam Tranter, who is also cycling mayor for Coventry, said: “Active travel is probably one of the only modes that can be removed based on local opinion without data or research; you wouldn’t build a new dual carriageway and close it a month later because it didn’t look like it was at full capacity.”

He said that the former cycle lanes are now “occupied by a handful of drivers of inconsiderately and illegally parked cars”, and that “the same councillors and residents who were up in arms about a cycle lane don’t seem to be too bothered about that.

“It was never about capacity, it was about something new that upset the status quo,” he added.

RBKC had previously refused to allow TfL to route part of Cycleway 9 along Kensington High Street, and in 2019 also withdrew its support for a segregated cycleway along Holland Park Avenue further north in the borough, both of which would have provided direct, safe routes for cyclists between west London and the city centre.

Instead, the council has said that its preference is for cyclists to be routed through quieter back streets, although those routes would of necessity be far less direct.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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6 comments

Avatar
TheBillder | 3 years ago
3 likes

Surely what we need is road pricing.

Some drivers are revolting against having a lane reserved for cycling and would rather see the space used for van parking as that is nice and familiar and obviously necessary - I mean who would leave an expensive piece of kit idle for 90% of the time?

We need to improve overall pollution, local air quality, congestion, and road surfaces. Electric vehicles deal with some of this but not all. So we need a price that takes into account overall pollution (eg at the power station for EVs), local pollution (tail pipe emissions), space taken on the road and vehicle mass.

This could solve the problem of diminishing tax revenue from fossil fuels, be set according to local conditions (eg cheap or free in remote rural areas), vary depending on the time of day or traffic levels, and crucially, gradually rise on the boiling frog principle.

As per the electricity wholesale market, prices could also be negative, so if your vehicle is sufficiently light (say under 35kg), small (say less than 0.5 m wide and 2.5 m long), and has zero emissions apart from a bit of exhaled CO2 and a bit of baked bean / sprout consumption by-product at times, you could get paid to travel.

What's not to like?

All that we need then is to rename RBKC to Kensington and Chelsea Using New Transport Solutions and my work will be done.

Avatar
nicmason | 3 years ago
11 likes

The point of new cycle lanes is they will build cycling demand. Someone made a comment that when motorways where first built they where very lightly used.

I'm happy cycling in traffic but I really feel for people when I see them out cycling in London with children.

 

Avatar
ktache | 3 years ago
0 likes

London, a bit like Reading moved from Tier 2 to 3 on the Thursday before moving to the as yet unheard of Tier 4 on midnight Saturday, as I remember.

Avatar
eburtthebike | 3 years ago
10 likes

So it was all worth it. What the people who wanted the cycle lane removed hated most, was that cyclists could ride straight past their cars stuck in the jams of their own making; and now they can't.

Avatar
Philh68 replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
13 likes

Nah, cyclists will filter past them anyway. So they will still be there to blame for "holding up traffic" despite being the only ones making progress.

Avatar
eburtthebike replied to Philh68 | 3 years ago
14 likes

Philh68 wrote:

Nah, cyclists will filter past them anyway. So they will still be there to blame for "holding up traffic" despite being the only ones making progress.

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