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Cyclist dies after collision with another rider on major London cycleway

Victim suffered ‘medical emergency’ following incident on CS7 in Balham this morning

A cyclist has died after suffering what police describe as “a medical emergency” following a collision with another rider on a major cycle route in south London this morning.

The Metropolitan Police Service says that officers were called to the incident on Balham High Road at the junction with Bedford Hill at 0822 hours.

“A man in his mid-40s was at the location suffering a medical emergency,” police said. “He was taken to hospital where he died a short while later. His next of kin have been informed.”

"At this early stage there appears to have been a collision between two cyclists before the man was taken ill,” the force added.

London Ambulance Brigade, who were called at 0817, said: “We sent an ambulance crew, an incident response officer, a clinical team manager, and two medics in cars. The first of our medics were at the scene in two minutes.”

While no motor vehicle was reported to have been involved in this morning’s incident, it has thrown the spotlight on the safety of cyclists using the route.

CS7, which runs for 14km from Colliers Wood to the City of London, was one of the capital’s first Cycle Superhighways, opening in 2010.

However, it attracted strong criticism from cycling campaigners due to the lack of physical protection, with the route marked out in the then-signature blue paint that characterised the early routes in the programme.

Lying mainly on the A24 before joining the A3 at Clapham Common as it heads towards the city centre, CS7 lies entirely on a ‘red route’ forming part of the TfL Road Network.

Last year, in response to the coronavirus pandemic and calls from cyclists to provide physical segregation, Transport for London (TfL) began upgrading the route, including installing wands to afford some degree of protection to riders, including at the location where this morning’s fatal incident happened.

In response to a thread on Twitter regarding this morning’s fatality, Councillor Jo Rigby, Wandsworth Labour Active Travel and Transport Speaker, pointed out that the Conservative-controlled borough opposed the upgrades to the route, creating a “hostile environment” that resulted in wands being removed.

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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3 comments

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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*Cycle SUPERHYPEWAYS.* (with apologies to swldxer).

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janusz0 | 2 years ago
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Is this one of the superhighways where nutters ride at speed on the wong side like they do on CS2?

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Steve K replied to janusz0 | 2 years ago
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No.  It's one of the not very super ones at all - until recently it was just a blue paint on the road job; there are now some wands and bus stop by-passes, but it's far from fully segregated.  I read the 'medical emergency' bit as suggesting the crash in itself would not normally have resulted in such a tragic outcome, but for some other medical issue.  It's very sad.  I'd cycled through there about 15 minutes before it happened.

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