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Jacob Rees-Mogg calls “optical illusion” cycle lane a “failed experiment” after 59 injuries in a year

“There is a pale coloured kerb and a pale coloured line that look exactly the same”, claim users after many tripped and fell leading to safety concerns

MP Jacob Rees-Mogg has criticised a bike lane after a Freedom of Information request by a councillor found that 59 people have been injured on the Keynsham High Street’s “optical illusion” bike lane, with cyclists raising concerns for safety and fearing a fatal injury if no improvements are made.

Keynsham South councillor Alan Hale found that an unusually high number of people, including both cyclists and pedestrians, tripped and fell on the High Street since the cycle lane had been put in place in last spring.

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,” while another person wrote that the cycle lane looks “like a kid drew it in their sleep”.

Now, MP for North East Somerset Jacob Rees-Mogg has chimed in on the debate on Twitter and called for an end to the lane, writing: “It should go back to being a two way street. This experiment has failed.”

> Jacob Rees-Mogg used racist term in House of Commons during swipe at “lunatic” cycle lane plans

This is not the first time that Rees-Mogg, who previously served as Minister of State for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency, has made his distaste for cycling infrastructure known. In November last year, he branded 20mph speed limits as “an anti-motorist, cash raising ploy” by tweeting a Telegraph article which said the scheme has little impact on collisions... “largely because they are often ignored”.

In 2021, the former Leader of House of Commons also used a racist term to describe the Liberal Democrats during a swipe at “lunatic” cycle lane plans set out by a “terrible socialist council”.

The bike lane in Keynsham, however, has come under fire as the kerb only exists on one side separating the bike lane from the pavement, but not on the other where it meets the carriageway. Add to that they are painted in a very similar way, making things worse.

Some work has been done on the cycle lane with the hope of reducing the number of falls. The lane, which had been plain tarmac, was painted red in August in response to — at that time — 46 incidents of people falling.

But it seems that painting the lane hasn’t solved the problems, and that the lack of distinguishable features for the kerb is the main cause of injuries. One person said: “As I stepped over the [kerb], I was expecting a flat surface which wasn’t there. I rolled my left ankle, fell, and landed on my right knee, wrist, and shoulder in the road stopping traffic.”

Conservative councillor Hale, however, has called for the cycling lane to be entirely removed, reports Somerset Live. He said: “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. 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.”

> Council paints over cycle lane after drivers keep clipping kerb at new pedestrian refuge

But councillor Mark Roper, Bath and North East Somerset Council’s cabinet member for economic development, regeneration and growth, defended the council’s response to the issues.

He said: “The new Keynsham High Street cycle lane is built to the government’s current LTN1/20 standards, and when some early problems were identified with the double kerb down to the road surface, a series of mitigations were put in place which has had the effect of substantially reducing the number of reported incidents.

“However we have now commissioned a Stage 4 Road Safety to suggest further improvements and mitigations and prevent any further issues. This will report back early in the next administration.”

Cyclists, however, are not too keen. One complaint on the council’s web read: “Amazed that the project team has said it is “compliant” and “we will not be making any further alterations”. This is dangerous and needs sorting urgently.

“Why are there different levels, and why does the design change along the street? In places road and cycle lane both “recessed" and then the “steps down 3 levels”. And all totally level in some places. And then the small island trip hazard outside the Post Office. Little distinction between white lines and pale stone “trip hazard” kerbs.”

Have you rode on Keynsham's so-called "optical illusion" bike lane? Let us know your thoughts on it at info [at] road.cc

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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42 comments

Avatar
Mungecrundle | 12 months ago
1 like

Just out of curiosity, but are there any before and after stats available with regard to the installation of this particular cycle lane on Keynsham High?

a. Number of cycle journeys.

b. Number of cyclists injured in collisions with motor vehicles.

c. Number of pedestrian journeys.

d. Number of pedestrian injuries due to collision with motor vehicles.

e. Number of pedestrian v cyclist collisions.

Not saying it is acceptable to replace one danger with another, and there must be a reason for so many people tripping over the kerb, but some perspective on overall increase or reduction of hazard would be helpful.

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Velo-drone | 12 months ago
6 likes

There IS a failed experiment in this story - but it isn't the bike lane.

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Rendel Harris | 12 months ago
4 likes

The Daily Hate (don't judge me, I have to skim through it for work purposes) has this as its lead story on the website this morning (the comments underneath are treat, nearly all about how dangerous cycling on pavements is even though the story has nothing to do with it), with an added piece underneath about the Cambridge cycle roundabout and its horrendous dangers. One can only conclude that the Hate editorial staff read road.cc to find their stories.

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ShutTheFrontDawes replied to Rendel Harris | 12 months ago
5 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:

The Daily Hate (don't judge me, I have to skim through it for work purposes) has this as its lead story on the website this morning (the comments underneath are treat, nearly all about how dangerous cycling on pavements is even though the story has nothing to do with it), with an added piece underneath about the Cambridge cycle roundabout and its horrendous dangers. One can only conclude that the Hate editorial staff read road.cc to find their stories.

The irony is I doubt the keynsham cycle lane makes the top 100 'worst' in the UK.

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HoarseMann replied to Rendel Harris | 12 months ago
6 likes

Ah, if it's the kerb between the footway and cycle track, then the problem is the historical and cultural precedent here in the UK of pedestrians enjoying their freedom to wander about in the cycle lane; then acting with surprise and disgust when a cyclist appears.

This cultural change will simply take time.

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chrisonabike replied to HoarseMann | 12 months ago
2 likes

Partly - it does seem here that there are inconsistent height changes as you go along.

Agree though that a) without extensive public education campaigns falls like this will just happen for a while ("experiential learning"), b) this is compounded by the rarity of cycle infra - people only meet it occasionally and c) we desperately need some (fairly prescriptive) national standards (not guidelines) with some legal backing. As in - if I just made up a wacky road design and this led to accidents I should expect to lose my job / seat and possibly be in court. EDIT - I am not a civil engineer nor lawyer...

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Steve K replied to HoarseMann | 12 months ago
6 likes
HoarseMann wrote:

Ah, if it's the kerb between the footway and cycle track, then the problem is the historical and cultural precedent here in the UK of pedestrians enjoying their freedom to wander about in the cycle lane; then acting with surprise and disgust when a cyclist appears.

This cultural change will simply take time.

Exactly this.  I think it also puts a lie to the suggestion that cyclists are so dangerous to pedestrians.  If this reverted to a two way road, the falls off the kerb would stop because pedestrians would know if was dangerous to step into the road.  However, they know it's not as dangerous (just annoying!) to step into a cycle lane, and then they miss the kerb. 

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brooksby replied to Rendel Harris | 12 months ago
7 likes

The same story is in the Bristol Post today as well.

A lot of comments BTL on there are picking up on how exactly a professional photographer "just happened" to be there when someone tripped and fell over...

A lot of other comments are along the lines of "Man not paying attention falls over - full news at 6".

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quiff replied to Rendel Harris | 12 months ago
3 likes

This is in reply to the Daily Mail caption rather than you Rendel, but...

*KERB  

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BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP | 12 months ago
7 likes

'Minister of State for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency'. ha, ha, ha  

That job didn't last long. Why ever not? There must have been, like, loads and loads of brexitty opportunities to exploit. 😂 

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brooksby replied to BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP | 12 months ago
2 likes
BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP wrote:

'Minister of State for Brexit Opportunities and Government Efficiency'. ha, ha, ha  

That job didn't last long. Why ever not? There must have been, like, loads and loads of brexitty opportunities to exploit. 😂 

Didn't Rees-Mogg also go around leaving little cards in his department saying, "I visited but missed you; I do so hope to see you back in the office soon"?  Passive-aggressively.  When people were still WFH due to fear of Covid.

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Off the back | 12 months ago
9 likes

I would call this Tory government a failed experiment and the shower of shite we have had in all its guises over the last 13 years. Can we ditch that too? Along with JRM who is the biggest example of being totally out of touch with modern society 

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HoarseMann | 12 months ago
3 likes

Just found an article with a better photo of the problem area. Looks like just adding double yellow lines would do the job...

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HoarseMann | 12 months ago
4 likes

I'm not sure this does conform to LTN 1/20

I'm assuming the hazard is the very low inset kerb between the road and the outer part of the cycle lane where the bollards/planters are. This would cause a slip hazard for cyclists trying to join the cycle lane and a trip hazard for pedestrians crossing the road.

If it's 'low level segregation', then it shouldn't be used here. LTN 1/20 advises against it in areas where pedestrians will be crossing the road.

If it was supposed to be a 'stepped cycle track', then the kerbs don't look high enough - they should be a minimum of 50mm.

I'm not even sure why they went for a low kerb here, there's enough width to do a proper full height kerb separation with the road or just paint a white line.

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chrisonabike replied to HoarseMann | 12 months ago
1 like

With Rendel's new article I suspect that at least one issue with colouring the lane differently is as you say - the drop from footway to cycle path is *not enough*, rather than too much. So it's that "reaching the bottom of the stairs too soon" kind of stumble. (Perhaps council worried about the drop being too high before they made the cycle path clearer? But if that were the case they shouldn't have made any...)

Sounds like other issues at least for pedestrians in the shape of inconsistent heights along the length here and an upstanding kerb in places on the *outside* of the path.

Designing public spaces - it's not rocket science, but it's biomechanics, psychology etc. and also easy to get wrong.

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ooldbaker | 12 months ago
1 like

This looks like a good design. A cycle friendly kerb on one side and a yellow no-parking line on the other which intuitively tells me there is a normal kerb there.

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Shades | 12 months ago
6 likes

I'm not far from Keynsham (Bath) so haven't cycled down there for a while, so difficult to pass judgement.  What I do know is that the local Bath & NE Somerset conservatives hate the cycle infrastructure with a passion; they all tend to represent the wards outside the built up areas.  For the local elections next week, the conservative manifesto in our ward (it's currently Lib Dem) is to rip up the segregated bike lane (100m going one way on the London Rd (token bit) which is a pretty challenging road on a bike at commute-o-clock) and get rid of all the 20mph speed limits (Bath is a rat-run hell hole at times).  They also want to get rid of the security measures that have removed virtually all traffic from the city centre; that apparently discriminates against disabled people (or they just want to drive in there themselves).  They also toady up to the #together anti-LTN libertarian fruit cakes and regularly post pictures of themselves standing next to compo-faced locals protesting against bollards stopping rat-running.  A prospective candidate managed to screw up his election chances with homophobic comments.  They'll use any old information to make a scene and the local click-bait rag is more than happy to oblige.

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chrisonabike replied to Shades | 12 months ago
11 likes

A party keen to exploit the issues of less fortunate for their own benefit and cynically chum up to fruitcakes to get temporary support, you say?

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the little onion | 12 months ago
6 likes

So there is a pedestrian risk with a trip hazard on a kerb, due to colouring, profiling etc. This could be resolved easily enough with appropriate painting. But the solution is to scrap the cycling provision entirely, and increase vehicular traffic?

 

Am I understanding this correctly?

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ubercurmudgeon | 12 months ago
9 likes

There have been worse experiments. Case in point: giving a sitting politician their own TV talk show.

But if we're talking about experiments in need of reversal, there's a certain one that was begun in 2016. One that he was, until recently, the minister in charge of finding any opportunities from, and the best he could come up with was supposedly happier fish.

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hawkinspeter replied to ubercurmudgeon | 12 months ago
5 likes
ubercurmudgeon wrote:

There have been worse experiments. Case in point: giving a sitting politician their own TV talk show.

Looks like he was given a talking to the other day: https://uk.news.yahoo.com/jacob-rees-mogg-clashes-own-081857737.html

Quote:

She said it was all a “distraction technique” to prevent people from focusing on the “real grievances in their lives which are caused by your government”.

She suggested that education issues, ambulance waits and soaring energy bills are all the real problems people face in the UK right now.

Rees-Mogg said: “Isn’t this why you should stand up for freedom of speech? Because if you attack freedom of speech in some areas, you’re then putting the government in control, you’re deciding politicians should...”

Purkiss cut in: “Mr freedom-of-speech here, did you or did you not vote to stop people protesting if it was annoying?”

Rees-Mogg said public protest was key to freedom of speech.

Purkiss replied: “What you do, it’s flawed. Your freedom of speech – all you do is you use your platform, you are born into a life of privilege Jacob, you decided to be a con man to lie to people who trust you.”

The commentator also explained her own stance when it comes to the government, saying:  “I’m not a massive leftie, I just realised what you lot were doing in government is disgusting, and you lie and you lie and you lie – and you’ve got no contrition.”

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Global Nomad | 12 months ago
3 likes

sounds like inconsistent design details - one of the first lessons when dealing with public surfaces is to provide consistent realtionships - why steps should all be the same size/height and why boundaries likewise - sounds like the relationship in levels between the pavement, cycle path and road  keep changing. What you know from one section doesnt apply a few meters down the road. Small steps or level changes can often be more dangerous than larger ones due to being harder to spot. 
As usual JRM avoids analysis and twists a solution to fit a different problem.

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OnYerBike | 12 months ago
2 likes

I'm slightly intrigued by what the high street looks like in real life and whether the "optical illusion" claims are valid. Just from the photos I'm struggling to understand the problem, but how things come out on camera don't always match how people see things (and of course it might only be an issue from certain angles etc.) The rate of injury attributed to the design does seem unusually high.

That said, suggesting the solution is to get rid seems completely daft to me. It doesn't appear to be a deliberate optical illusion or other experimental design (unlike e.g. wobbly lines, wavy curbs, ghost roundabouts). It's a very normal road layout with a pavement separated by a kerb from the carriageway, and painted lines on the carriageway. If there is something particular about the combination of colours or heights or lighting that makes the transitions less obvious, then surely there are fixes that address the problem? A different colour paint? Or a taller kerb - is the problem the apparently very low kerb hindering depth perception from recognising the change in level?

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Bmblbzzz replied to OnYerBike | 12 months ago
0 likes

It's not a normal road layout. Also, the problem is not pedestrians being hit by cyclists. The problem is that there is a "one-way kerb" which pedestrians are tripping over. There is pavement, with a normal kerb down to the carriageway, which is now (on the southern side of the road) a cycle lane. Then there is another kerb down from the cycle lane to the rest of the road (which is a bus lane in one direction only.) Because the cycle lane is flat and the bus lane is flat, you wouldn't expect a kerb, but there is, and its top is flush with the cycle lane.

The council have been aware of the problem for some time, as several months ago they fixed little signs (labels, almost) to the kerb, saying "trip hazard, take care" or words to that effect. 

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Hirsute | 12 months ago
8 likes

This is all a result of the remainer institutional mind virus.

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Hirsute replied to Hirsute | 12 months ago
1 like

Correction
Downgraded to 'dismal elites'
Or it's gone dormant.

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the little onion replied to Hirsute | 12 months ago
6 likes

NO! It's the woke-eating guardianista tofu elite you have to blame here.

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chrisonabike | 12 months ago
1 like

It would be useful to actually see this.  I think having the street one-way for motor traffic sounds very sensible - this is a "place" e.g. a high-street with lots of shopping etc.  The images don't look particularly bad but presumably there are some odd bits elsewhere?

Looks better than before anyway.  Streetview shows what appears to be some "entry level" interventions (at least they made the street one-way...)  What is going on with those planters? They should be outside of the cycle lane, not inside it.

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IanMK replied to chrisonabike | 12 months ago
8 likes

So JRM fails to recognise that this has not been a two way street for years and that the work carried out last year was only an upgrade on the previous one way design which isn't what people are complaining about.

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wycombewheeler replied to chrisonabike | 12 months ago
2 likes
chrisonatrike wrote:

What is going on with those planters? They should be outside of the cycle lane, not inside it.

How else would they keep pedestrians safe from the dangerous cyclists?

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