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Plans for new Lidl store rejected because they fail to consider pedestrians and cyclists

Chris Boardman has praised the "embedded commitment to change" from Salford Council that saw the proposal turned down because it wouldn't "sit sympathetically" with the area...

Plans for a new Lidl supermarket in Salford were turned down because of a "dominative" presence of car parking and a failure to maximise the potential for movement of pedestrians and cyclists. Lidl said it was "disappointed" with the decision, while Greater Manchester's Transport Commissioner Chris Boardman was among those who praised the council for rejecting the planning application.  

The Manchester Evening News report that the plans were turned down due to numerous issues with the design, and the council officers said that it did not "respect the positive character of the local area". The store would have sat on the site of the former Manchester Racecourse, which was student accommodation until 2015 but is now being turned into 500 new homes described as an "exciting new vibrant neighbourhood" by owner Fred Done, who is also the CEO of Betfred. The Castle Irwell site includes plans for a 'green core' including new cycle routes. 

The new Lidl store plans therefore fail to "counterbalance" the layout of the estate being built nearby, said the council's report, and the design shows potential for conflict between pedestrians, cyclists and other road users. The report added: "Insufficient information has also been submitted to demonstrate that the proposed development would have an acceptable impact on the surrounding highway network or that the proposed access and egress point on Littleton Road would provide for the safe interaction of cars, delivery vehicles and pedestrians and cyclists."

With the option to appeal within six months or submit a new application, a Lidl spokesperson commented: "Whilst we are of course disappointed with the decision we are, as ever, committed to bringing our fresh, quality and great value produce to the local community and will continue working with council officers to find the right solution.

"We would like to take the opportunity at this time to thank all of those who have supported us so far, and look forward to sharing updated plans in the not too distant future."

Some others on social media commented that this isn't the first time the German supermarket has appeared cycle-unfriendly, with one pointing out the lack of cycle parking at its Maidenhead store - Lidl replied that it would pass the request for bike parking spaces to its regional office. 

One commented on "an opportunity missed" to support those travelling by bike to Lidl stores due to its sponsorship of the Deceuninck - Quick-Step pro team, while another claimed that plans for a new Lidl store in Birmingham has no bike infrastructure. Birmingham Live reports that the plans for the store in Mere Green were approved, with the only request for improvement being that the building design must be more "appealing". 

road.cc has asked Lidl for further comment on its commitment to cycling and walking in future planning applications. 

Arriving at road.cc in 2017 via 220 Triathlon Magazine, Jack dipped his toe in most jobs on the site and over at eBikeTips before being named the new editor of road.cc in 2020, much to his surprise. His cycling life began during his students days, when he cobbled together a few hundred quid off the back of a hard winter selling hats (long story) and bought his first road bike - a Trek 1.1 that was quickly relegated to winter steed, before it was sadly pinched a few years later. Creatively replacing it with a Trek 1.2, Jack mostly rides this bike around local cycle paths nowadays, but when he wants to get the racer out and be competitive his preferred events are time trials, sportives, triathlons and pogo sticking - the latter being another long story.  

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21 comments

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Sriracha | 2 years ago
0 likes

Seems like they can do it if they want to (but maybe need encouragement and remining):
https://forum.bikeradar.com/discussion/comment/20436513/#Comment_20436513

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Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
9 likes

It's not just Lidl, it's every on the edge of town retail park. 4000 car park spaces but only a couple of metal bike loops at the far end of the park near the recycling bins. The councils need to apply similar requirements as they do for disabled parking spaces and demand bike parking outside every shop, not just at one end of the retail park out of sight and therefore in a prime location for bike thieves.

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brooksby replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
6 likes

I agree.

However I suspect that they don't put bike parking in because they tend to make the environment around those retail parks so hostile to anyone not in a car that they don't imagine that bike parking will ever actually be needed...

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HoarseMann replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
6 likes

My usual bike parking spot in town yesterday - hopefully no bodies or bikes were harmed.

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markieteeee replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
0 likes

There's a city one near me where the only place to secure your bike is a couple of rails behind the trolley bay (on the pavement side).  They have a big car park which I've never seen more than about a quarter full at the very most, as most people in the area shop on foot. There are usually more people waiting at the bus stop or sat on Lidl's wall right next to it than there are cars in the car park (to the point where if I've had to walk past during the pandemic, I've opted to cut through the car park because it's empty whereas it's impossible to socially distance using the pavement alongside Lidl). They don't even have the excuse of out-of-townness to justify pandering to motorists and I doubt there are loads of people who come far across London to aim for that specific branch.  

I realise that before Lidl took it over, it was a Toys R Us or something so maybe they didn't have to apply for  specifics to do with transport and just took over the footprint of the site. But I'd hope something new and similar would be declined due to this, even if it was repurposing an existing site.  Oddly, there is also an Aldi about 200m away with almost the exact same layout and issues, but without any specific cycling parking - you have to lock to the outside rail of the trolley bay itself. 

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eburtthebike | 2 years ago
7 likes

I'm so glad this decision was taken, and it will lend ammunition to those responding to development plans which ignore cyclists.  I hope Lidl and other shops will take note and put in proper provision, and that designers and planners will take this on board and finally, finally, provide properly for cyclist shoppers.

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Prosper0 | 2 years ago
4 likes

My local Lidl in Dartmouth has a large car park with zero bike parking. Pretty stupid considering how easy it is.  

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Jenova20 replied to Prosper0 | 2 years ago
0 likes
Prosper0 wrote:

My local Lidl in Dartmouth has a large car park with zero bike parking. Pretty stupid considering how easy it is.  

Same for me unfortunately. And their lamp posts in the car park have such a large base that I can't chain my bike to them. I have to chain my bike to a post out on the street, and then walk to lidl instead.

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nikkispoke replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
1 like

My local Lidl is the same zero provision for parking any cycle and very limited space to walk from the nearby road to the store. The entrance to the car park is shaped so that cars speed in and out making it far more dangerous to walk along the pavement outside the store. We also have an Aldi that had cycle parking but which was removed for an unknown reason. I applaud Salford council and would urge Lidl and other supermarkets to be part of the community and design store layouts and external areas for everyone not rely on being picked up by council officals.

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HoarseMann | 2 years ago
1 like

There's also a distinct lack of bicycle parking at Spaceport America, but if you're lucky, then a kind stranger will mind it for you whilst you're in outer space.

https://youtu.be/RTpWYWIfP7Y?t=1145

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eburtthebike replied to HoarseMann | 2 years ago
2 likes

He had to go so far out to get a proper perspective on his gigantic ego.

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Sriracha | 2 years ago
6 likes

I'm a Lidl shopper, but I love this decision. Hopefully it makes Lidl think a lidl bigger than welding a few wheel benders onto the trolley stall, and just where the rain comes in. I'd have thought Lidl would be the natural ally of cyclists - smaller shops and local shopping - but they've a real blind spot for cyclists unfortunately.

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Muddy Ford replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
1 like

Lidl may sell bike gear, but shoppers on bikes are not good customers for them. They want shoppers to purchase in bulk in one visit, rather than buy little and often and have designed the stores to support that. Frequent small load shoppers would make the shop busier without the increase in sales, and requires them to divert shelf stackers to tills. Therefore they have oversized trolleys, and tills with no run off requiring you to use a trolley to pack. If you have a trolley you are more likely to fill it. Using a shopping bag instead of a trolley means putting it on the floor at the till and trying to pack it whilst the cashier runs your purchases through like its an olympic event. The essentials (bread, milk, eggs) are not located close to each other, they are put in 4 corners of the shop and your search for them is distracted with discounted items or sweets etc. that you feel compelled to add to your trolley whilst forgetting the shopping list you went in with. If you have a small bag you would shop more conscious of the carrying capacity and not be tempted by the discounted or random crap. 

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MattKelland replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
2 likes

This is so true. See also: vouchers for money off, but only when you spend a certain amount. As a cyclist, I rarely spend more than £20 in one go.

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jh2727 replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
3 likes

I tend to make 2-3 trips to Lidl in a week.  It doesn't take them any longer to scan the items than it would if I were to buy the same items in a single trip - it means paying 3 times, but payment processing is lightning fast with contactless payment.

If I'm only doing a small shop, I can generally keep up with the cashier - but if I couldn't I could still use a trolley for a small shop.

More trips means they means they have more opportunity to tempt me with the nonsense that I don't need.

I steer clear of their busy times, which I probably wouldn't be able to do, if I was doing a weekly shop. So that has to be good for them.

My local store has Sheffield stands and a nearby store recently replaced their wheel benders with Sheffield stands.

In contrast my local Co-Op Food convenience store is purely for small shopping trips, it is adjacent to a shared use path and has about 26 car parking spaces - and about 4 wheel benders (might be five, but they are so tightly packed, you'd struggle to fit 3 bikes). It is on a new build estate, that opened less than 5 years ago.

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Sriracha replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
2 likes

All the Lidls I've used have a few larger trollies, but most are little mini-trollies, and there's even more of the pull-along baskets. They seem to positively encourage smaller shopping trips, possibly to keep re-tempting you with the middle-of-lidl stuff. The shops themselves are not exactly big, the whole scale is far smaller than the traditional supermarket, and they tend to be local rather than out of town. The whole set up seems ideal for welcoming the cyclists shopper. Except for the lack of proper bike parking.

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Muddy Ford replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
0 likes

Maybe it's just the ones near me.

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Bmblbzzz | 2 years ago
0 likes

Can't comment on the Salford decision as obviously that's about how the proposed supermarket fits into the whole area, but surprised at the example above of Maidenhead Lidl having zero bike provision; round here (Bristol) my local(ish) Lidl has far better bike parking than any other supermarket.

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Jetmans Dad replied to Bmblbzzz | 2 years ago
1 like

Our local supermarkets are not hopeless, they are clueless. 

On one occasion, I popped into Aldi on my way home just to pick up literally two or three items. No sign of anywhere to park the bike, so I asked where I could lock it up, and was told they were happy for me to lock it on one of those shiny silve bollards (as shown in the Maidenhead Lidl picture in the article). 

Erm ....

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jh2727 replied to Bmblbzzz | 2 years ago
1 like

I think a lot of it comes down to the local council - both the Aldi's nearest me have plenty of Sheffield stands, under cover and visible from the tills whilst you queue.  Doesn't surprise me about Maidenhead - I used to work there and this is what the council consider to be good cycle provision for a 40 limit road...
 

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Bmblbzzz replied to jh2727 | 2 years ago
1 like

I expect it also depends whether it's an edge-of-town or more central location. The one I'm thinking of is new build, relatively central, and not only the bike parking is good (and well used), but the interior doesn't resemble what someone's described above either.

Anyway, we seem to be overlooking the good news, that the planning authorities are taking cycling and walking into consideration.

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