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"Optical illusion" cycle lane that caused 59 injuries in a year undergoes maintenance work

Locals have said the colour and dropped levels have seen pedestrians trip, Jacob Rees-Mogg recently calling it a "failed experiment"...

A Somerset town's "optical illusion" cycle lane, branded a "failed experiment" by Jacob Rees-Mogg, is back in the press today as the high street infrastructure is set to be improved with works, however the colouring and depth — issues locals have claimed are causing the problems — do not seem to be being addressed.

Keynsham's cycle lane made headlines in the spring as a Freedom of Information request by a councillor revealed that as many as 59 injuries had been caused by the infrastructure, with both cyclists and pedestrians reportedly struggling with the similarly coloured sections and depths that "look exactly the same".

The noise around the "optical illusion" saw tabloid photographers sent to snap pictures of pedestrians tripping on the kerb and even saw Conservative MP for North East Somerset Jacob Rees-Mogg calling for the high street's return to a two-way street". "This experiment has failed," he said.

Jacob Rees-Mogg and Keynsham High Street cycle lane

For the next two weeks, June 5 to June 22, the lane is to undergo maintenance to repair broken paving slabs and replace bollards and cycle stands, works a councillor says have been "scheduled for some time".

"The works to repair the broken paving slabs and replace cycle stands and bollards have been scheduled for some time," Councillor Paul Roper said. 

"We are conscious of the concerns about trips and falls linked to the cycle lane and so it's understandable that people may wonder what is happening when contractors arrive."

In a sign of how the town's cycle lane story has reached the wider, less cycling-orientated media, Cllr Roper was speaking to Lad Bible and said that concerns about injuries would be taken seriously.

"[The council has] already acted by introducing the red coloured cycle lane finish that has reduced the number of reported incidents significantly," he said, explaining that once the works are complete a design assessment will take place to decide if extra improvements are needed to reduce injury risk.

So far 21 people have pursued legal action against Liberal Democrat-run Keynsham Council having claimed to have been injured by the lane, with seven of the personal injury compensation claims being rejected. The remaining 14 are under investigation.

"There can be no other local authority in the country that has created a development that has succeeded in seriously injuring 59 people at least and have done nothing to address the situation," Conservative councillor Alan Hale said.

"We are elected to make our community safe, not to inflict significant injuries. To make it safe we need the administration and officers to take positive action, not sit on their hands."

One person who tripped on the day it opened said, "There is some kind of optical illusion. There is a pale coloured kerb and a pale coloured line that look exactly the same."

Dan joined road.cc in 2020, and spent most of his first year (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. At the start of 2022 he took on the role of news editor. Before joining road.cc, Dan wrote about various sports, including football and boxing for the Daily Express, and covered the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Part of the generation inspired by the 2012 Olympics, Dan has been 'enjoying' life on two wheels ever since and spends his weekends making bonk-induced trips to the petrol stations of the south of England.

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23 comments

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mattw | 4 months ago
1 like

We have the numbers.

59 people injured in 12 months Mar 22 to Mar 23. 5 per month.

13 people injured in 8 months Apr 23 to Nov 23. 1.5 per month.

Seems to work - now do it professionally.

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hawkinspeter | 9 months ago
1 like

https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/keynshams-optical-illusion-cycle-path-8504124

Quote:

Three university professors have suggested why people keep tripping over an 'optical illusion' cycle lane near Bristol. Psychology experts from Bristol and Cardiff universities visited Keynsham after months of complaints about the new lane and markings.

Professors Nick Scott-Samuel (University of Bristol), Ute Leonards (also Bristol) and Simon Rushton (Cardiff) are interested in the human visual system, so took time out to head to the High Street after reading about people who have injured themselves there.

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rjfrussell | 9 months ago
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I fear I am being very dim.  What is the "optical illusion"?  Is it simply that because there is a flat painted white line on the road side of the cycle lane, people think the kerb on the pavement kerbside is not a kerb?

Doesn't sound so much like an illusion as idiocy

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brooksby replied to rjfrussell | 9 months ago
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rjfrussell wrote:

I fear I am being very dim.  What is the "optical illusion"?  Is it simply that because there is a flat painted white line on the road side of the cycle lane, people think the kerb on the pavement kerbside is not a kerb?

Doesn't sound so much like an illusion as idiocy

Exactly that, according to the news coverage: the painted white line looks "just the same as" the kerb, and people claim it's an optical illusion causing them to stumble and fall.

Gets even sillier when you have people coming forward saying that they've tripped there multiple times on the same day (and especially when they also just happen to do so within camera-shot of a tabloid photographer...).

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Hirsute replied to rjfrussell | 9 months ago
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It's nothing like the orcas in Cardiff with a dark base that blended in with the road so those with poor vision didn't see them.

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newbankgyratory replied to rjfrussell | 9 months ago
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Keynsham appears to have a high proportion of elderly residents. Some of them will have vision issues, mobility issues, dementia, etc, etc.

Small drops can be difficult to see - easy to catch the side of your shoe against it and trip.

Small drops can be difficult to see - if the other light-coloured street lines look flat then it is easy to assume the footway kerb is flat too.

The best solution would be to make the footway and cycleway the same level with the kerb-drop next to the carriageway.

And - especially in this particular high street - the cycleway should be marked for mobility scooter users too.

 

 

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chrisonabike replied to newbankgyratory | 4 months ago
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(If only there were such a place) the thing to do would be to do it like in some country where they've a generation of data on making this work if you do this sort of thing everywhere, at a national level.  If only there were such a place, perhaps with a very similar climate, say just over 100 miles away.  If only we could figure out a way to make it easy for everyone to cross each other's paths, safely and conveniently..

And yes, there will be some casualties - probably for a generation - because *change*.  You have to look at the current situation (rates) and the overall cost and benefit numbers though if you're in a position of responsibility.

Agree that (the appropriate categories of) mobility scooters should count as "cycles" also - that's another thing that needs sorted.

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Samtheeagle | 9 months ago
2 likes

Work started to build Stevenage in 1946 and has superb cycling infra.  We invented this stuff and have LTN 1/20 to guide its design now.  We just need to follow this and also, move people away from the addiction of car use.  Change management is not easy but otherwise extinction beckons. 

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chrisonabike replied to Samtheeagle | 9 months ago
1 like
Samtheeagle wrote:

Work started to build Stevenage in 1946 and has superb cycling infra.  We invented this stuff and have LTN 1/20 to guide its design now.  We just need to follow this and also, move people away from the addiction of car use.

The second part of your last sentence is unfortunately at least as important as the previous points.  The main reason why most people drive in Stevenage is that driving is very convenient.  It is already the default where people have access to a car.  That's many if not most people.

A network of convenient, safe, social cycle infra going to all destinations (with safe parking) is necessary but not sufficient if we want fewer people to drive.   For that we will also need to reduce the convenience of driving.  It's not quite zero sum but where cycling is less convenient than driving people will drive - even where costs of driving are high.

Guardian wrote:

The borough council’s cycle strategy [says]: “Stevenage has a fast, high-capacity road system, which makes it easy to make journeys by car. Residents have largely been insulated from the effects of traffic growth and congestion and generally there is little incentive for people to use modes other than the private car ...

(From this article - there is also a more in-depth one by the same author).

To quote the second: "Where driving is easy, Brits drive"

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qwerty360 replied to chrisonabike | 4 months ago
1 like

My understanding is there is also a big problem in stevenage that when the potteries went bust and new businesses built offices elsewhere nearby the new construction wasn't linked to the cycling infrastructure.

 

So if you are cycling around the town centre in parts that were originally built, there is a good separate network;

If you are on any newer construction at either end of a journey you can often only access it via the road network; A road network explicitly designed on the basis that there was a complete high quality segregated network of foot/cycle paths...

Add in poor maintenance and lack of signage so you need to know where you are going to navigate it...

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chrisonabike replied to Samtheeagle | 9 months ago
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On "has superb cycling infra" and "LTN 1/20".  I have not been on the Stevenage cycleways myself and I'm sure I'd find them useful.  It may be "great for the UK" or "appreciated by existing cyclists".  Is it "suitable for mass cycling" though - the mass of people who currently drive those short journeys?  The roads in Stevenage appear to be great for drivers.  There are roads everywhere - a true network, with higher-capacity "arteries" etc.  The cycle routes - not so much.  How does that infra compare with the convenience of the roads?

LTN 1/20 is good as far as it goes but sets the bar low in some places.  Particularly important - it only mentions social cycling (side-by-side) in passing.  It also has get-outs for inadequate infra.

Beyond that we need something on what "good" looks across a town, a city, a metro area.  (A "dense network" of direct routes - just like we have for driving on!)  And national standards, not guidelines.  (What colour should a cycle path be - so everyone knows where / what one is?)  And ideally "how to get there from here".

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chrisonabike | 9 months ago
6 likes

Honestly - the levels of "not invented here" are sometimes bizarre on the surface.

A good handful of places across Europe have been using designs and policies which work fine. They have increased cycling while enabling walking. Society there didn't collapse.

One country - NL - even has a half- century track record here. Designs are similar
- most have rough and ready approximations of the gold standard NL version.

In fact the UK itself has almost a century of cycling infra designs, which we've mostly forgotten.

It's like the UK was "experimenting" with traffic lights, and local councils or even towns were just making up designs at random, putting in a couple of these per region. "They don't really work" say the leaders, "safer not to waste the money".

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 9 months ago
4 likes

This all gets worse when you realise that other countries are currently at different levels of development in active travel. There are a series of "natural experiments" at different stages laid out on our doorstep. It's like a guide on how - and how not - to get from where we are to somewhere better.

There are conferences, there is publicity, there is research and even folks eager to act as tour guides for the skeptical.

Meanwhile UK: "this field is totally unknown. We'll have to start at the beginning". Followed by (checks history book) at least a quarter-century of repeatedly funding "experiments" or "demonstrations", apparently throwing the results away after each.

Of course this assumes that our leaders were being sincere about their objectives...

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 9 months ago
9 likes
chrisonatrike wrote:

Of course this assumes that our leaders were being sincere about their objectives...

The constant announcement and then quiet withdrawal of funds for Active Travel suggests that not only are they not sincere, but actively dishonest whenever it suits them or their pals.

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brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 9 months ago
1 like
hawkinspeter wrote:
chrisonatrike wrote:

Of course this assumes that our leaders were being sincere about their objectives...

The constant announcement and then quiet withdrawal of funds for Active Travel suggests that not only are they not sincere, but actively dishonest whenever it suits them or their pals.

Our Govt? Actively dishonest??  Say it ain't so!

 

(OT, but did anyone see that article about Sunak getting a helicopter from London to Dover, which is allegedly a 45 minute train journey...)

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Hirsute replied to brooksby | 9 months ago
10 likes

Compare and Contrast

//pbs.twimg.com/media/Fx24OMMWwAEFfDf?format=jpg&name=small)

"A quick game of Spot the Difference between our PM and the Dutch PM to while away the afternoon."

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hawkinspeter replied to Hirsute | 9 months ago
6 likes
Hirsute wrote:

Compare and Contrast

"A quick game of Spot the Difference between our PM and the Dutch PM to while away the afternoon."

Is it that only one of them spent £850m of the Treasury's money to increase Covid-19 infections by between 8% and 17% with a ludicrous "Eat Out to Help Out" scheme?

Or is it that just one of them boasted about taking money out of deprived urban areas and funnelling it towards richer places such as Tunbridge Wells?

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chrisonabike replied to Hirsute | 9 months ago
6 likes
Hirsute wrote:

Compare and Contrast

"A quick game of Spot the Difference between our PM and the Dutch PM to while away the afternoon."

One is using a bike to get around and the other is using a trike?

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rjfrussell replied to Hirsute | 9 months ago
3 likes

the Dutch PM, despite not have access to billions in his domestic set-up, and being quite tall, has managed to shop for a pair of trousers that go all the way down, rather than stopping someway above the ankle?

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jh2727 replied to rjfrussell | 9 months ago
0 likes
rjfrussell wrote:

the Dutch PM, despite not have access to billions in his domestic set-up, and being quite tall, has managed to shop for a pair of trousers that go all the way down, rather than stopping someway above the ankle?

If the bottom of his trouser legs were just a little higher they would qualify as "pedal pushers".

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Shades replied to chrisonabike | 9 months ago
4 likes

I've just been in Copenhagen (used a bike a LOT) and they have plenty of these sort of bike lanes.  I did stumble on one of these curbs but then I wasn't looking where I was going; my fault.  Somewhat more elightened thinking in Copenhagen; also a vastly fitter and slimmer population than here (especially Keynsham!!).  It's also pretty cold and dark there for 6 months of the year so that doesn't have an impact.

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chrisonabike replied to Shades | 9 months ago
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Well - there's always a measure of "change!"  Anything new does take time for people to "learn" even if objectively it is safer.

Copenhagen - while still much better than the UK in this respect - is still "2nd class infra".  In a way that's a good thing: it gives the UK an example that we can believe we could achieve.  Where our planners and politicians will say "wow - so many people on bikes!  I can see that is actually a positive thing to have happen.  And I think I can see how we could actually manage to get that sort of infra built in the UK.  Within a few decades..."

There are some features of their current designs where we might be able to start with something better though.  In this context we should copy the Dutch standard where cycle paths are a different colour from the road and the footway (almost everywhere in NL).  That colour should be standardised nationally (not quite universal in NL).

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abedfo | 9 months ago
10 likes

I'd brand Jacob Rees Mogg a failed experiment.

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