Less than two weeks ago, there were no plans to cancel the London Bike Show, due to have been held this weekend. But instead the show’s venue, the ExCeL exhibition centre in the capital’s Docklands, is being hurriedly converted into a temporary hospital to treat victims of the coronavirus pandemic.
It's a stark sign of how quickly the crisis has taken hold in the capital. While around 37 per cent of the 6,650 cases so far confirmed are in London, and the city accounts for more than half the 423 deaths in the UK to date.
Named The Nightingale Hospital, the temporary facility at the 100,000 square metre venue will be operated and staffed by the military and will have 500 beds, rising to 4,000 beds once fully operational. It is due to open by next week.
According to the Ministry of Defence, it is the first of several such facilities planned across the UK, with London chosen as the site of the first because the city is running 1.5 to 2 weeks ahead of the rest of the country in terms of the number of cases of coronavirus.
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Cycling Weekly has just published a similar article citing a recent study published in the BMJ using data collected from 230,390 commuters in 22 different sites across the UK.
"If 1000 people incorporate cycling into their commute for 10 years we would expect 26 more injuries, but 15 fewer cancers, four fewer heart disease events, and three fewer deaths."
https://www.cyclingweekly.com/news/latest-news/benefits-of-cycling-to-wo...
As good as those figures are, they're neglecting the harm caused to others by driving (e.g. collisions, air pollution).