There are a few people you meet in life that really change your life and take it off in a new direction. I met Dougie when I was 11. He had just taken on the shop and was still being 'shadowed' by the previous owner, making sure he didn't bugger it up! I had rescued my dad's aging 3 speed sit up an beg bike from the shed and with the help of a library book I spent the summer holidays restoring it to rideable condition. It was a beast of a machine that I could only just manage to climb on with great care - my dad is 6 ft 4 and I'm 5ft 8!
I'd been playing up in Hardcastle Crags and the 30 year old perished Dunlop White Sprite tyres had not survived the outing. I went to buy a puncture repair kit but he took the time to look at the tyre and suggested I might need to replace it. That evening I struggled with spoons, spanners and screwdrivers to free the tyre from the rim. Needless to say I was back down at Dougies the next day to buy tyre levers, an inner tube and a tyre........
That bike had some curious and extremely fragile rubber/cork handlebar grips. They were lovely to hold but in wet weather and on steep hills they would suddenly fly off, leaving you hanging on to nothing but fresh air, or worse still, smashing your face into the stem. So that was my next purchase. Dougie took the time to explain to me how to fit the new plastic grips, using washing up liquid to lubricate them into place.
When the rubber pedals fell apart, I upgraded to steel 'rat trap' pedals. But first there was the problem of how to remove the old ones, which were cemented in place with decades of rust. Dougie scuttled out into the back room and reappeared with the biggest spanner I had ever seen."Use this" he said. "Bring it back in when you're done." The right one came off easy enough but try as I might the left was stuck solid. It was Dougie who explained to me about left hand and right hand threads!
A year or so later I had scraped together £85 from my paper round and birthday money to buy a brand new Raleigh Europa from Dougies shop. It was in Raleigh team colours, a replica of the professional bike. For me this was my entry into club cycling. I could finally keep up with everybody else on the Cragg Vale climb. Once again Dougie was ever generous with the 'Big Spanner' and a freewheel remover every time I wore out the chain and sprockets, and taught me how to true the wheels when I broke a spoke. When a proper lightweight Denton racing bike was traded in, he made sure I could afford it and kept it for me until I was able to pay him. This meant that I could start racing and that year I won the schoolboys hill climb cnampionship, as Malcolm Elliot took the junior trophy.
This kind of thing went on and on, he was ever patient with me and my friends as we traipsed back and forth to his shop having wrecked some other part of a bike or run out of airgun pellets. A few years ago when my daughter (AKA 'The Cycling Goth') wanted her first pair of Dr Martens, we knew that Dougie would provide! The week before he retired he was showing me round, laughing at some of the stock that was still there from the days of his predecessor 'Arthur Jimmy'.
When I went for my first job, Dougie gave me a good reference. I still have it. One way or another, I've made my living from cycling ever since the 1980s, but that would never have happened without the patient, ever smiling presence of Dougie during my teenage years. Thank you Dougie Mansfield, you will be greatly missed!
Thursday, 5 June 2014
Wednesday, 4 June 2014
Small Towns, Big Ideas for Cycling
Last year I accidentally went on holiday to the Netherlands. It was accidental in the sense that I intended to meet somebody in Amsterdam for work, my teenage daughters had intimated that they might still be prepared to cycle, but only if it was in Holland (they have suffered too many wet and hilly UK cycle holidays!). In the end the kids pulled out and so just me and Mrs Lordonabike made the trip. I thought a bit about the infrastructure compared to the UK - more of which is in a previous blog Proof of the Appelgebakken
I have been to the Netherlands many times but always to conferences, study tours and work meetings in the bigger cities. I didn't know what to expect from the countryside. We spent a couple of days wandering north through the dunes up the coast from the Hook of Holland before heading inland towards the Utrecht Ridge and the Hooge Veluwe National Park and then followed the great rivers towards west, with a long weekend in the coastal province of Zeeland before catching the boat to Hull.
At the risk of upsetting the Dutch I have to say that the scenery was pleasant enough but not spectacular. The agricultural heartlands of the Netherlands are just that; agriculture on an industrial scale. In the south and east however, the countryside gets better as it starts to undulate into more varied heathlands, forests, vineyards, meadows and valleys leading to the Rhine and other great rivers.
Well kept urban areas add significantly to the beauty of the Netherlands. The rivers carry huge freight containers, the coast has massive concrete barages to keep the tides at bay and the whole country is a network of canals and dykes. There are few 'wild' places. Perhaps the Dutch take more care with the built environment because their countryside is not so great!
There is very little specific 'cycle infrastructure' within villages and smaller towns. There are some obvious differences to the UK, mainly that nearly every pub, cafe, supermarket etc has more bike parking spaces than car parking spaces. The main difference is the extensive use of cobbles and block paving as road surfacing. This is almost universal in older villages and towns, but also widely used in newer settlements. For drivers this gives an audible and visual cue to slow down to the speed limit (usually 30 kmh). It is a simple thing, but it helps reduce the need for speed humps, chicanes etc (although these are also used) and seems to help make drivers more willing to give way to cyclists and pedestrians.
In April I visited Chris Boardman's home town of West Kirby on the Wirral peninsula. It is an attractive and quite genteel place with a lovely promenade, sandy beaches and a central shopping area dating from Victorian times. The only transport 'problem' in the town is the busy main road that effectively slices the place in two and makes it too dangerous for children to travel independently, and leaves everybody else scurrying across. Its the usual vicious circle where many people drive short distances because walking and cycling has become hazardous and unpleasant. Chris's challenge was: How would we 'Cycle Proof' a typical small town?
West Kirby is not a huge place and you don't have to be Chris Boardman to cycle from one end to the other in under ten minutes, in fact most of the built up area is within a ten minute walk of the centre. You can read more about what I recommended at British Cycling Tour of West Kirby
When we were walking back to the station we bumped into an attractive woman. 'That's Daniel Craig's sister.' Said Chris Boardman. My day was beginning to feel like an episode of Stellar Street. 'We thought Daniel was a ponce at school with all that acting crap, but he's doing alright now isnt he?!' Lots of people in West Kirby recognised Chris (and he recognised them), not just because he's famous, but also because he's local, and regularly walks and cycles to the cafe and the pub. When we met again a few weeks later, I too was welcomed back in the station cafe, and I'm not famous.
It's a small thing but I have noticed that even a quiet person like me gets to meet a lot of people when on foot or bike. Consequently I rarely feel threatened by 'society' because almost without exception the young or old, rich or poor of our country are pretty friendly. Some of my friends who drive everywhere seem perpetually worried about crime, mugging, teenagers, or indeed anyone who is 'different' to them. I lived in the same house in Birmingham for ten years but there were some people in our street that I just never met because they only ever walked from their front door to the car. I dont know if there's any research to back this up, but I'm sure you just get to know more (and more varied) people if you walk and cycle a lot. If you just hang out with people like yourself, such as work colleagues (or even other cyclists!), that probably is a bit unhealthy in shaping your view of the world. It's good to meet people who challenge your beliefs and live different lives. There is an oft quoted piece of research by Donald Appleyard that showed how the amount of traffic had a dramatic impact on social connections in a street:
In the late 1960s Appleyard conducted a renowned study on livable streets, comparing three residential streets in San Francisco which on the surface did not differ on much else but their levels of traffic. The 2,000 vehicles per day street was considered Light Street, 8,000 traveled on Medium Street and 16,000 vehicles passing down Heavy Street. His research showed that residents of Light Street had three more friends and twice as many acquaintances as the people on Heavy Street.
The other flipside about cycling is illustrated in Chris's mate Ned Boulting's book 'On the Road Bike' where he describes what happened when a cycle repair shop opened up next door to his local barber, Ahmet (I've abridged his original prose):
"Suddenly in the summer of 2012 there was the confluence of two events. The first was an almighty traffic jam, it took him an hour to drive the 3 miles from home. The second was that a bike repair shop opened next door. Ahmet took notice and bought a bike. The bike shop owner told him there was a cycle path almost all the way from his house to the shop, through a park and along a river. Ahmet now rides to work with pride and delight every day, and no trip to the barber is complete without a discussion on cycling.
He's had new bike racks installed outside the shop. He recommends Marks bike shop to his customers and Mark has brought new customers to Ahmet, middle-class men who would normally never have considered the Village Barber's at the end of the road."
Ask any successful business where they get most customers from and they will invariably say 'personal recommendations'. Small businesses need local custom to generate that kind of marketing and can't survive so easily in a car-based society.
We don't often think about these fringe benefits (yes, awful pun) when making the case for investment in cycling. It's hard to prove with any certainty that walking and cycling foster social cohesion and mental well being by providing more human contact. It's hard to argue that small towns and villages where people currently live largely car dependent lives will suddenly transform into 'better places' if we restrict rather than facilitate car use. By definition, towns and villages are geographically small, so they should lend themselves to walking and cycling. If people shop locally, jobs and services in the towns are more easily preserved as money spent locally stays within the local economy, and the poorest and most vulnerable don't have additional travel costs to find work, education or healthcare. When people meet and interact with their fellow villagers in the pub, cafes, streets and shops they may not always agree with one another, but problems such as crime and extremism are less likely. We need to give the same priority to non-motorised transport in smaller settlements that we do in the great cities, not only to address traffic issues, but to ensure a healthy population and sustainable economy.
I have been to the Netherlands many times but always to conferences, study tours and work meetings in the bigger cities. I didn't know what to expect from the countryside. We spent a couple of days wandering north through the dunes up the coast from the Hook of Holland before heading inland towards the Utrecht Ridge and the Hooge Veluwe National Park and then followed the great rivers towards west, with a long weekend in the coastal province of Zeeland before catching the boat to Hull.
At the risk of upsetting the Dutch I have to say that the scenery was pleasant enough but not spectacular. The agricultural heartlands of the Netherlands are just that; agriculture on an industrial scale. In the south and east however, the countryside gets better as it starts to undulate into more varied heathlands, forests, vineyards, meadows and valleys leading to the Rhine and other great rivers.
Well kept urban areas add significantly to the beauty of the Netherlands. The rivers carry huge freight containers, the coast has massive concrete barages to keep the tides at bay and the whole country is a network of canals and dykes. There are few 'wild' places. Perhaps the Dutch take more care with the built environment because their countryside is not so great!
There is very little specific 'cycle infrastructure' within villages and smaller towns. There are some obvious differences to the UK, mainly that nearly every pub, cafe, supermarket etc has more bike parking spaces than car parking spaces. The main difference is the extensive use of cobbles and block paving as road surfacing. This is almost universal in older villages and towns, but also widely used in newer settlements. For drivers this gives an audible and visual cue to slow down to the speed limit (usually 30 kmh). It is a simple thing, but it helps reduce the need for speed humps, chicanes etc (although these are also used) and seems to help make drivers more willing to give way to cyclists and pedestrians.
Main coastal road within a town centre, Zeeland
In April I visited Chris Boardman's home town of West Kirby on the Wirral peninsula. It is an attractive and quite genteel place with a lovely promenade, sandy beaches and a central shopping area dating from Victorian times. The only transport 'problem' in the town is the busy main road that effectively slices the place in two and makes it too dangerous for children to travel independently, and leaves everybody else scurrying across. Its the usual vicious circle where many people drive short distances because walking and cycling has become hazardous and unpleasant. Chris's challenge was: How would we 'Cycle Proof' a typical small town?
Boardman in transport planner mode
West Kirby is not a huge place and you don't have to be Chris Boardman to cycle from one end to the other in under ten minutes, in fact most of the built up area is within a ten minute walk of the centre. You can read more about what I recommended at British Cycling Tour of West Kirby
Visualisation of the main road through West Kirby
When we were walking back to the station we bumped into an attractive woman. 'That's Daniel Craig's sister.' Said Chris Boardman. My day was beginning to feel like an episode of Stellar Street. 'We thought Daniel was a ponce at school with all that acting crap, but he's doing alright now isnt he?!' Lots of people in West Kirby recognised Chris (and he recognised them), not just because he's famous, but also because he's local, and regularly walks and cycles to the cafe and the pub. When we met again a few weeks later, I too was welcomed back in the station cafe, and I'm not famous.
It's a small thing but I have noticed that even a quiet person like me gets to meet a lot of people when on foot or bike. Consequently I rarely feel threatened by 'society' because almost without exception the young or old, rich or poor of our country are pretty friendly. Some of my friends who drive everywhere seem perpetually worried about crime, mugging, teenagers, or indeed anyone who is 'different' to them. I lived in the same house in Birmingham for ten years but there were some people in our street that I just never met because they only ever walked from their front door to the car. I dont know if there's any research to back this up, but I'm sure you just get to know more (and more varied) people if you walk and cycle a lot. If you just hang out with people like yourself, such as work colleagues (or even other cyclists!), that probably is a bit unhealthy in shaping your view of the world. It's good to meet people who challenge your beliefs and live different lives. There is an oft quoted piece of research by Donald Appleyard that showed how the amount of traffic had a dramatic impact on social connections in a street:
In the late 1960s Appleyard conducted a renowned study on livable streets, comparing three residential streets in San Francisco which on the surface did not differ on much else but their levels of traffic. The 2,000 vehicles per day street was considered Light Street, 8,000 traveled on Medium Street and 16,000 vehicles passing down Heavy Street. His research showed that residents of Light Street had three more friends and twice as many acquaintances as the people on Heavy Street.
Appleyard's diagrammatic image of social connections in streets
The other flipside about cycling is illustrated in Chris's mate Ned Boulting's book 'On the Road Bike' where he describes what happened when a cycle repair shop opened up next door to his local barber, Ahmet (I've abridged his original prose):
"Suddenly in the summer of 2012 there was the confluence of two events. The first was an almighty traffic jam, it took him an hour to drive the 3 miles from home. The second was that a bike repair shop opened next door. Ahmet took notice and bought a bike. The bike shop owner told him there was a cycle path almost all the way from his house to the shop, through a park and along a river. Ahmet now rides to work with pride and delight every day, and no trip to the barber is complete without a discussion on cycling.
He's had new bike racks installed outside the shop. He recommends Marks bike shop to his customers and Mark has brought new customers to Ahmet, middle-class men who would normally never have considered the Village Barber's at the end of the road."
Ask any successful business where they get most customers from and they will invariably say 'personal recommendations'. Small businesses need local custom to generate that kind of marketing and can't survive so easily in a car-based society.
We don't often think about these fringe benefits (yes, awful pun) when making the case for investment in cycling. It's hard to prove with any certainty that walking and cycling foster social cohesion and mental well being by providing more human contact. It's hard to argue that small towns and villages where people currently live largely car dependent lives will suddenly transform into 'better places' if we restrict rather than facilitate car use. By definition, towns and villages are geographically small, so they should lend themselves to walking and cycling. If people shop locally, jobs and services in the towns are more easily preserved as money spent locally stays within the local economy, and the poorest and most vulnerable don't have additional travel costs to find work, education or healthcare. When people meet and interact with their fellow villagers in the pub, cafes, streets and shops they may not always agree with one another, but problems such as crime and extremism are less likely. We need to give the same priority to non-motorised transport in smaller settlements that we do in the great cities, not only to address traffic issues, but to ensure a healthy population and sustainable economy.
Wednesday, 16 April 2014
A Tale of Two Cities - Parliamentary Cycling Trip to Belgium
A dozen delegates led by Lord Berkeley and Adam Coffman
visited Belgium. With its impeccable political connections and eclectic mix of
Associate members from the world of cycling, the All Party Parliamentary Cycling Group (APPCG) reaches people and
places that other technical tours cannot, and this always ensures that
discussions explore political, technical, social, legal and financial aspects
of cycling. Our party this year included parliamentarians, consultants, Police,
a cycle safety equipment inventor and cycle campaigners.
picking up the hire bikes - look at the width of the cycle track!
Belgium regards itself as Europe’s third cycling nation
(behind the Netherlands and Denmark) although there is a marked difference in
utility cycling which is split largely between the Flemish speaking north of the
country and the French speaking southern part of the country. Cycling is the
national sport of Belgium, exciting a similar degree of passion and
participation as football does in the UK.
the Lion of Flanders, a familar site to cycle racing fans
One purpose of the trip was to compare and contrast the
cities of Brugge (Bruges) and Brussels. These cities are very different. Bruges
is a compact small city of 120,000 people known primarily as a tourist
attraction. Brussels is Europe’s capital
and one of its busiest multi-cultural cities, attracting residents and visitors
from around the world. One is historic, compact, picturesque and flat, the
other has expanded beyond its historic mediaeval core area into a sprawling
metropolis, home to over 1 million people as well as attracting a large
commuter population each day. It is not surprising therefore that cycling in
each city is a markedly different experience.
residential cycle parking lockers, Bruges
Our visit started in the historic city of Bruges, famed for its attractive canals, market squares and cobbled streets. Immediately outside the station was a large secure Fietsenstalling (cycle park) from where we picked up our rental bikes. Around 20% of rail travellers use a bike to access the rail system in Belgium, and over 77,000 cycle parking spaces are provided at stations.
The hire bikes are ‘Blue Bikes’ a national station-based
cycle hire scheme inspired by the OV-Fiets system in neighbouring Holland. The
bikes can be hired from over 40 locations throughout Belgium for €3.00
per day. The sturdy bikes come with 3 speed gears and a handy basket on the
rear rack.
The other immediate impression was that the 5.0m wide
two-way cycle track outside the station was considerably wider than the
adjacent one-way drop-off lane for car traffic, and it was surfaced in
immaculately smooth red tarmac.
We set off on a short journey through the suburbs to meet
the Mobility Minister for Flanders (Hilde Crevitz) and other officials from
Bruges and the Flanders region. Our journey involved a ‘mix’ of infrastructure,
including cycle tracks, shared use paths, cycle lanes and quiet streets. Not
everything was perfect. There were some poor surfaces and restricted width in
places, but there was a great sense of ‘continuity’ and crucially the busiest
intersections were grade separated or had separate signalled crossings.
Patrick D’Haese gave a short presentation about cycling in
the region. Some key facts include:
·
Annual cycling budget for 2014-15 is €100m (up
from €60m) within an overall transport budget of €3bn. The Flanders population
is 6 million people. i.e. €16.6 spent on cycling per head of population.
·
Cycling mode share is currently 12.9%. There has
been an increase in city cycling but a decrease in rural areas.
·
Cycling deaths have fallen from 122 in 2000 to
64 in 2012. There are about 1000 serious injury accidents to cyclists each year,
a 7% annual decrease.
·
1750km of new or refurbished cycle routes
created in Flanders since 2009
·
The Integrated Cycling Investment Programme has
identified a future potential network stretching 12,000km. This will include
facilities delivered via new developments as well as government funding.
Changes have been made to planning policy to facilitate cycle track
construction.
·
Cycle track standard is 5.0m preferred width,
4.0m minimum
·
Broad aim is to separate cycling from other
modes. General design criteria is <30kph mix with traffic, <50kph cycle
lanes, >50kph cycle tracks.
·
There are 72 grade separated cycle crossings
(bridges and underpasses) in the regions and many of these are developed as
‘landmark’ projects.
·
Other innovations include a specialist machine
for analysing cycle track surface quality and special equipment for snow
clearance and winter maintenance of cycle tracks.
Following lunch, we cycled to
one of the landmark bridges, the impressive ‘Y Brugge’ a forked bridge over the
N31 on the outskirts of Bruges. The impressive structure offers a safe crossing
over a busy road intersection. It was installed in 2013 at a cost of €4m.
the Forked Bridge, Bruges
Returning to the city centre, we
learned that around 60% of traffic entering the ancient walled city area is
bicycles. There are 3,500 public cycle parking spaces in the centre, including
a section of an underground car park in the central square. In addition, 600
‘mobile’ parking spaces are available for events such as the Tour of Flanders
cycle race which took place the day before our visit. We also noted some
on-street cycle parking shelters within the residential areas so that people
living in terraced housing with no outside space are able to securely store
bicycles.
entrance to underground cycle park and car park, Bruges
Our trip to Brussels was hosted
by Kevin Mayne of the European Cyclists Federation (ECF). We picked up our Blue
Bikes from the central station and pedalled to the ECF headquarters through
some of Brussels quieter streets in order to avoid the busiest roads during the
rush hour. The experience was very familiar to those of us used to riding in UK
cities, mixed traffic, lots of parked cars, busy roads to cross and the need to
‘take the lane’ in order to turn left (right in UK). It was hard to keep
together as a group in the intensity of traffic and with differing ability to
cope with the hills, so there were frequent stops to regroup.
contraflow cycle lane outside parking bays, Brussels
Brussels is a useful city to
look at for UK planners. It has no inherent ‘cycling culture’. Cycling is more
popular among the expat population (about 11% cycle regularly) than the local
population (around 3% regular cyclists). Cycling in Brussels currently accounts
for about 4% mode share, an increase from just 1% in 2007.
At the ECF we learned about
their work with cycling organisations throughout Europe. Their major initiatives
include:
·
The Euro-Velo network of Europe-wide cycle
routes
·
The Velo-City conference which has become the
most prestigious event for cycle planners attracting over 1400 delegates.
·
Involvement in various research projects funded
by the European Union as a way to raise the political profile and lever more
funding for cycling.
·
Working to influence policy decisions across all
relevant sectors within the European parliament.
The ECF has a unique Europe-wide
perspective on cycling. It’s aim is to help countries to work towards an
average 15% mode share for cycling across the EU by 2020. It is estimated that
the current economic benefits of cycling are worth €217bn across the 27
European countries. The UK does not always fully exploit opportunities for
funding for cycling from the EU. 6bn There is a target for €6bn funding for
cycling during the period 2014-20. Currently countries such as Hungary, Poland,
Czech Republic and Germany are all receiving over €100m for cycling projects
from Europe. UK politicians can do more to ensure that our partnership
agreement and operational programmes incorporate cycling to ensure that funding
is made available.
We were also given a brief
introduction to cycling in the Brussels region by Frederik Depoortere. Some of
the key facts he shared include:
·
Brussels has an €11m annual cycling budget for a
population of 1.1m people (i.e. approx. €10 per head).
·
There is 60% car ownership across the region
(relatively high).
·
There is >100m height difference across the
city including hills in the central area.
·
A 265km network of 19 strategic routes has been
identified at approx. 400m spacing. Mainly signed routes on quieter streets.
·
A public bike system (similar to the London
scheme) operates in the city centre.
·
Due to the topography of the city with a lack of
direct alternatives, a high proportion of cycle trips is on the main roads.
·
Around 80% of one-way streets have unsegregated
contraflow, around 400km in all. These streets have a good safety record.
·
Non infrastructure interventions include a ‘3
day bike buddy’ where a motorist is paired with an experienced cyclist,
resulting in 80% success in permanent change of mode. Around 400 people per
year are involved.
·
There is an annual Car Free Sunday event.
At the European Parliament we met Brian Simpson, Chair of
the European Transport Committee. He was able to update us on the European
Infrastructure Safety Directive and in particular progress on HGV design
(passed by Parliament on 15th April) to make them safer for
pedestrians and cyclists.
the politicians pose for the Het Nieuwsblad photographer
Local politicians joined us for lunch, and were able to talk
to them at length about how cycling was perceived locally, and how progress was
achieved through general consensus among the main parties. We rounded off the
afternoon with a visit to some of the cycle infrastructure that has been
introduced in recent years. This includes cycle contraflow lanes alongside
parking bays, adjacent cycle tracks at footway level, ‘cycle streets’ where
cars are required to wait behind cyclists and cycle lanes to the offside of
right-turn lanes to help reduce conflict from ‘right hook’ turns (left hook in
UK). There is some tension between regional level government and city level. An
example of this is that a cycle lane was painted overnight (replacing a traffic
lane) on a road administered by regional government to avoid discussion about
capacity with the city officials!
cycle lane through junction to offside of right turn lane, Brussels
shared use cycle contraflow with signal control crossing, Brussels
The study offered an excellent contrast between what is
possible where cycling becomes more fully established and accepted as a main
mode of transport and the challenges of introducing cycling to congested cities
where space is at a premium and cycling is regarded as a fringe activity.
Tuesday, 8 April 2014
A DNS on the start sheet
Spring can be a bittersweet time for many people. The end of the dark winter days, warmer weather, spring flowers and lambs in the fields. It should be a great time of optimism, indeed a time to put a spring into your step.
For me the site of daffodils often reminds me of a day 20 years ago this year when I decided to take my own life. It was a beautiful crisp bright day, cold and sunny with that hint of a smell of summer to come in the air. The daffodils in question were all over the grassy banks below York's historic city walls. I was in the midst of a lengthy and protracted break up with my girlfriend of 5 years, we were squabbling over the sale of our house, my work was going badly and as often happens in a divorce, friends thought it might be helpful to 'take sides'. I didnt want them to be nasty about my ex, and I was stunned how some people reacted to me when she and I were attempting to part as amicably as we could. Slowly but surely I withdrew from the world, only maintaining the social contact required of my job. I wasn't particularly feeling sorry for myself, it was more that I was determined (in the words of Simon and Garfunkel) that I would be a 'rock' - cos a rock feels no pain. The line from that bloody song I am a rock, I am an island, cos a rock feels no pain, and an island never dies was almost an internal mantra throughout that time. It is surprisingly easy to become isolated. Say no to invitations a few times and soon the phone no longer rings, probably more so if you are a divorce bore or just plain miserable!
That day I realised that I was feeling nothing, there was no pleasure to be had from the spring sunshine. There was nobody to share it with. Thanks to a quick witted passer by, a community psychiatric nurse and the Samaritans I lived to tell the tale. It wasnt the best time in my life, but during that recovery I could feel myself getting mentally stronger. But like many people I kept it quiet, didn't tell my family what happened, told work I was ill for a week and then went straight back. Just one person knew about it. I often wonder how many people go through these dramatic events completely unremarked.
Last night, as I sat in a hotel room in Belgium I had a phone call. My best friend, a cycling buddy that I've known since I was 15, was found in a lonely part of Halifax with deep cuts to his wrists and legs. He's still in the intensive care ward but he is going to pull through. We've been on some pretty brutal hard bike rides together over the years, through all that the Yorkshire hills and winters can throw at us. I know that together we can always keep going.
I should have seen the signs. He stopped cycling, then stopped going to the pub, then I hadn't heard anything for a few weeks. But of course I was busy, and that day I rode past his house without stopping I was training for an event, and then I was working away a lot, and well, yes he just hasn't been as much fun the last few times we went out.....
I'm visiting him tomorrow. Making time for that visit that I didn't make a few weeks ago. Because he's important to me now. He won't be lining up with me this Sunday morning for our local spring audax ride, but he should be. I'm going to make sure we are both there next year.
Cycling is a great way to keep the 'Black Dog' at bay, but everybody needs a little extra help from friends at times. We should never forget that, and we should talk about it.
For me the site of daffodils often reminds me of a day 20 years ago this year when I decided to take my own life. It was a beautiful crisp bright day, cold and sunny with that hint of a smell of summer to come in the air. The daffodils in question were all over the grassy banks below York's historic city walls. I was in the midst of a lengthy and protracted break up with my girlfriend of 5 years, we were squabbling over the sale of our house, my work was going badly and as often happens in a divorce, friends thought it might be helpful to 'take sides'. I didnt want them to be nasty about my ex, and I was stunned how some people reacted to me when she and I were attempting to part as amicably as we could. Slowly but surely I withdrew from the world, only maintaining the social contact required of my job. I wasn't particularly feeling sorry for myself, it was more that I was determined (in the words of Simon and Garfunkel) that I would be a 'rock' - cos a rock feels no pain. The line from that bloody song I am a rock, I am an island, cos a rock feels no pain, and an island never dies was almost an internal mantra throughout that time. It is surprisingly easy to become isolated. Say no to invitations a few times and soon the phone no longer rings, probably more so if you are a divorce bore or just plain miserable!
That day I realised that I was feeling nothing, there was no pleasure to be had from the spring sunshine. There was nobody to share it with. Thanks to a quick witted passer by, a community psychiatric nurse and the Samaritans I lived to tell the tale. It wasnt the best time in my life, but during that recovery I could feel myself getting mentally stronger. But like many people I kept it quiet, didn't tell my family what happened, told work I was ill for a week and then went straight back. Just one person knew about it. I often wonder how many people go through these dramatic events completely unremarked.
Last night, as I sat in a hotel room in Belgium I had a phone call. My best friend, a cycling buddy that I've known since I was 15, was found in a lonely part of Halifax with deep cuts to his wrists and legs. He's still in the intensive care ward but he is going to pull through. We've been on some pretty brutal hard bike rides together over the years, through all that the Yorkshire hills and winters can throw at us. I know that together we can always keep going.
I should have seen the signs. He stopped cycling, then stopped going to the pub, then I hadn't heard anything for a few weeks. But of course I was busy, and that day I rode past his house without stopping I was training for an event, and then I was working away a lot, and well, yes he just hasn't been as much fun the last few times we went out.....
I'm visiting him tomorrow. Making time for that visit that I didn't make a few weeks ago. Because he's important to me now. He won't be lining up with me this Sunday morning for our local spring audax ride, but he should be. I'm going to make sure we are both there next year.
Cycling is a great way to keep the 'Black Dog' at bay, but everybody needs a little extra help from friends at times. We should never forget that, and we should talk about it.
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Time for Cycling
With Dr Who back on the TV this weekend it’s a good excuse
to be all timey wimey. Cycling requires travel in both space and time after all.
There are two elements to every journey, the distance and the time it takes. In
cycle racing the one who gets there quickest is usually the winner. People
generally want an easy life and will happily choose to cycle if it is as safe
and convenient as driving, because in most towns and cities cycling is already
quicker and more enjoyable.
So what has this got to do with infrastructure? Well, the
battle over ‘space for cycling’ is well understood. It’s pretty clear that
squeezing onto a narrow road or busy junction with fast moving cars and HGVs is
unappealing to many people. Physical separation by getting rid of excessive
traffic in town centres and residential streets, or by creating cycle tracks
and crossing facilities where traffic speeds and volumes can’t be addressed, is
the solution.
However physical segregation presently comes at a price when cyclists cross the path of other traffic.
Many cyclists won’t use existing cycle tracks because they involve lots of
stopping and starting. There is an
advantage in staying on the carriageway where you can keep moving. The penalty
for increased separation is decreased convenience, additional effort to stop
and start, and therfore additional journey time through delays at junctions. It doesn’t
have to be that way, but to take full advantage of more space for cycling we
also have to win more time for cycling. Dedicated time is one of the ways in
which cyclists and pedestrians can be physically separated from vehicles
turning across their path.
It only takes cyclists and pedestrians 5-10 seconds to cross
a road or junction from a standing start. Most people no matter how young or old can lap the Manchester Velodrome
in less than 30 seconds, but if you’re good, you can do it in half that
time. You’d think that traffic signals
would be set to cater for the average, rather than the Olympian, to pass
through a junction without other traffic bearing down on
them. However time for motor traffic is regarded as sacrosanct by engineers
keen to avoid (or not exacerbate) delay to drivers so if you’re a pedestrian or
cyclist, you have to be quick off the mark.
Similarly delay while waiting to cross a junction is
invariably passed to the pedestrian and cyclist because you can of course
‘stack’ hundreds of pedestrians and cyclists in to far less space than is taken
by a few queuing cars, and then force them to sprint across the road. As well
as creating chaotic and unpleasant conditions for pedestrians (and ideal
conditions for city pick pockets), these delays are especially disproportionate
given that people are usually only walking and cycling short distances and
could easily spend half of their journey time standing still watching moving
traffic. Living Streets are highlighting this in their current #timetocross
campaign because for an increasing elderly population, running across the road
in a crowd of people is impossible as well as unpleasant, but all that could be resolved with just 3 more seconds for pedestrians at crossings. For cyclists, a 3 second head start would be enough to avoid many 'left hook' collisions where a vehicle turns left into cyclists going straight on at traffic lights.
Unfortunately, even relatively minor junctions such as supermarket exits usually feature a ‘pedestrian
refuge’. That tiny, cramped island fortress of guardrail in the middle of every
busy junction. Is it really a safety feature? Or is it there to enable traffic
to have the maximum time at the junction, while pedestrians and cyclists scurry
across in the gaps between. The
‘staggered’ refuge that requires a sharp turn and an unpleasant rest in the
middle of the road is entirely to serve ‘capacity’ requirements of motor
traffic and is invariably unsuitable for conversion to a toucan crossing, which
is one of the only legal options for creating segregated cycle crossings in the
UK. However, making this into a straight across that is convenient for cyclists
and pedestrians is often refused by traffic engineers and network managers because
it would require additional crossing time and delay motor vehicles. If we are
to have more segregated cycle infrastructure in the UK, we have to have direct
crossings, with separate flows of cycles and pedestrians able to cross a
carriageway in one single movement. Current UK legislation doesn’t even cover
how to sign and mark these parallel crossings hence the DfT is unable to
publish design guidance!
The target for the number of stops per kilometre at
junctions on a main cycle route in the Netherlands is zero. Of course in a big
city this target is never achieved, but it is an indication of the absolute
priority given to pedestrians and cyclists in the design principles and in transport policy.
In the 1950s, 60s and 70s British engineers did at least give
some thought to this by providing bridges and subways for pedestrians in New Towns and in ring road systems, just
that they got it the wrong way round. The cars should have been made to go up
and down and the pedestrians and cyclists stay at ground level. Or at least
there should have been a halfway house compromise, to avoid the damp, dark, indirect,
crime ridden subways and bridges that
have given the concept of grade separation a bad name among pedestrians and
cyclists.
There really is no excuse for the paucity of time allocated
to non-motorised users. It is possible to design traffic lights that offer a
‘green wave’ to cyclists in just the same way that we currently do with SCOOT for
motor vehicles. A detection loop on a
cycle track can trigger the lights to change on the approach to a junction so
that when the cyclist gets there they have a green light amd don’t lose
momentum, and this can have a push-button back up system in case the loop doesnt detect that snazzy carbon fibre bike of yours.
It is possible to design side-road , junctions with ‘tight’
geometry – angular kerbs, speed tables and narrow entrances, so that cyclists
and pedestrians can be given priority and turning vehicles have to wait until they can safely
manoeuvre. It is possible to continue the footway and cycle track over a side
road entrance and make vehicles give way and bump up and down to cross it,
instead of always making pedestrians and cyclists do the crossing no matter how
minor the junction.
It is possible to
give right-turning cyclists a safe space to wait on the nearside and a dedicated time to cross,
avoiding the need to cross moving traffic lanes and wait in the middle of the
road.
All of these things are possible, but crucially they require
time.
There is still a possibility to get this right in new road schemes.
For existing junctions in busy towns and cities however, cyclists and
pedestrians need to engage in the Time War to ensure that safe space for
cycling also means a similar level of priority and convenience for cyclists as
is offered to motor traffic. That takes political courage and a recognition that its time to treat cycling and walking as legitimate modes of transport that can achieve the objective of efficiently moving people (not just vehicles) around congested towns and cities.
Friday, 11 October 2013
Are you the right kind of cyclist?
Last weekend I gave a talk at the CycleNation conference in Leeds Civic Centre. At this event local cycle campaigners from across the UK gather to catch up and exchange ideas. I'm not a regular stalwart attendee but have been going intermittently since the early 1990s. My talk was about cycle infrastructure - surprisingly enough as I'm the world's greatest bore on the subject! I'd been asked to speak in my capacity as infrastructure adviser to British Cycling.
My talk was billed as a workshop so there was a fair amount of interaction, questions and inputs from the audience. In my final slide I concluded that it was important that infrastructure improvements went hand in hand with other measures to encourage cycle use such as Bikeability training, route mapping, skills training for engineers, publicity, led social rides and events such as Sky Ride.
This latter point seemed to be surprisingly controversial. The opening gambit from a member of the audience being 'I don't see what riding about on closed roads in helmets and hi viz has to do with everyday cycling'. It seems, that in the opinion of at least one campaigner, the thousands of people inspired to turn up to such events are in some way 'less worthy' than others. On the one hand I can sympathise with this, apart from racing and a few local CTC events I tend to avoid most forms of 'organised cycling'. To me it seems a bit of a waste of money to pay £25 to ride a sportive when you can just go and ride the same roads for free and have money for beer and cakes instead. On the other hand (and this was reinforced by my experience of working with the Cycling Towns for Cycling England and more recently sitting with the LSTF team in Birmingham Council), cycling is an alien and scary concept to many people. They really do want the reassurance of closed roads and an organised event, and of course most of us get some sort of 'buzz' from taking part in something with lots of other people. Most of all its a fun day, and the underlying message is that you could have this much fun on a regular basis. Sky Ride may only yield a small number of new regular commuter cyclists per event, but it is raising the profile of cycling and attracting large numbers of riders in a way that smaller events can't, and for one day a year streets that are normally full of cars are given over to the bicycle, which can't really be a bad thing can it?
Cyclists seem particularly prone to division. We have the various 'national bodies' British Cycling, CTC, Sustrans most prominently, but also the Road Time Trials Council which pre-dates the controversial re-birth of massed start road racing in the UK in the 1950s which eventually led to the formation of British Cycling from the warring factions of the British League of Racing Cyclists and the National Cyclists Union. Families and clubs were split asunder by those who wanted to join the 'League' and be like the continentals, and the modest black-clad secretive British world of early morning time trials. Similarly the Clarion movement offered a socialist alternative to the 'gentleman's club' types in the early CTC. My neighbour, a rabid mountain biker, has a deep suspicion of 'roadies'. Asked whether he'd consider cyclo cross he said, "Really, to me that's just sitting on the fence, you're neither a roadie or a mountain biker!" Cycle campaigners also seem to fall into those who want more people to cycle, and therefore reach out to non/novice cyclists and those who want to make things better for existing cyclists, as well as divisions about what is required to achieve their aims. Obviously we need all types of campaigner, so this shouldn't be seen as a problem.
My own cycling activity since August. What type of cyclist am I? Two weeks cycle camping tour, 6 mile round trip to the railway station most days, 8-10 hours training on local roads, bridleways or extended commute rides each week, racing in the local cyclo cross league and Three Peaks race, doing site visits and travel to meetings as part of my consultancy work and often picking up some shopping on my way home. This weekend I covered 50 miles on Friday working in London on a site visit, an hour on local bridleways on Saturday and just got in from a 2 hour road ride today (Sunday). Is any one of these activities really 'better' than others. For most the alternative would be a car trip or sitting around doing something 'sedentary' but then I drive to races so that's arguably an extra car trip, and its one of the few times we actually use a car in our household.
The economic benefits of cycling derive from improved health (around 65% of benefit), reduced pollution, improved air quality and reductions in congestion. In theory, my recreational cycling has a lower value to the economy (Because I'm only really getting the health benefits) but of course living 1000 ft up in hilly West Yorkshire I wouldn't logically choose to ride my bike for all those utility trips as it is easier and faster to drive. The bottom line is, I mainly cycle to keep fit enough to be able to enjoy my leisure cycling, but the only time I can do this is by combining it with 'utility' trips. This seems to be the case for most club riders that I know. They may view themselves primarily as sports cyclists but their training run is often the daily commute. That's OK, but what about all the money given to National Parks through LSTF and Cycle Ambition? That money is purely for leisure cycling. Wouldn't it be better spent elsewhere in towns and cities? People only drive into the area, go for a ride on a trail and drive out again. Well, these people will still be getting some of the health benefits of regular cycling. Work funded by Cycling England found that many of the leisure cyclists surveyed were regular visitors from nearby. Anecdotal evidence from cycle hire/sales firms in national parks also suggests that people make 2 or 3 visits to hire a bike before returning to actually buy a bike on their 3rd or 4th trip. It was clear from the research that 'occasional' cyclists were becoming more regular cyclists, if not everyday cyclists. More importantly for rural economies there is a substantial weight of evidence that cyclists generally spend more (compared to car borne visitors who typically park, spend just 20 - 40 minutes in a place and then move on to the next place), supporting local businesses, especially if they prolong their stay overnight, which they will do if there is a network of leisure routes to explore. Cycling as the sole purpose of a leisure visit, or as a means of access and transport to other attractions in the countryside is therefore important in boosting rural economies and keeping visitors occupied, and therefore not driving their cars. In short, yes we should be investing in rural leisure cycling because its one of the ways in which people get introduced to more regular cycling and because it contributes to sustainable tourism.
Leeds Civic Centre is the venue where my own paid career as a consultant started. In 1996 I went to a talk at an open evening of the Leeds Cycle Campaign entitled 'Segregation or Integration'. After the talk, the speaker, a former member of the cycle campaign, offered me 6 weeks temporary work to go and help him write a local authority cycling strategy. I took a chance that it might lead to something more and luckily it did!
Unsurprisingly, in 1996 the cycle campaigning world was split. Some people loved the Dutch system and thought this was the way forward. The Danes in particular were embarking on major infrastructure improvements and Safe Routes to School at the time and I worked on a Sustrans pilot project to try to copy this approach in Leeds. Others (the majority in those days) felt that really we needed to remove motor traffic and reduce speeds so that cyclists would feel safe on the roads. This is the key to 'sustainable safety', reducing traffic danger to make the roads safer for all users.
It is thoroughly depressing that some people still take these 'sides' when its clear (and entirely consistent with Dutch and now Danish experience) that we need to do both. The 'segregation' countries only put cycle tracks where they are needed, and use a variety of measures to manage demand and reduce speeds to enable cyclists to safely share the roads in residential areas, town and city centres. They also do a lot of promotion and training. The Danes for example ran the successful 'Bikebusters' project where participants were given bicycles, locks, waterproof clothing, training and other support to take away every 'excuse' for not cycling. Even in their flat country with lots of infrastructure they had to work to build the number of cyclists. The 2012 edition of 'Collection of Cycle Concepts' details many other ways in which the Danes use training and promotion to increase cycling. The Colombians and Brazilians offer the 'Cyclovia' events to turn over the roads to cyclists, skaters and pedestrians on a Sunday. The Dutch offer cycle training to children, and specialist schemes to assist immigrant populations for whom cycling isn't a natural cultural choice.
The important thing is that all measures to increase cycling, whether through traffic reduction, training, mass participation events, inspirational Olympic success or building separate infrastructure help to broaden, strengthen and increase the cycling community. Lets not worry about what kind of cyclist we are, or whether we wear Lycra, Paul Smith, Laura Ashley or tweed. Vive le Difference!
My talk was billed as a workshop so there was a fair amount of interaction, questions and inputs from the audience. In my final slide I concluded that it was important that infrastructure improvements went hand in hand with other measures to encourage cycle use such as Bikeability training, route mapping, skills training for engineers, publicity, led social rides and events such as Sky Ride.
This latter point seemed to be surprisingly controversial. The opening gambit from a member of the audience being 'I don't see what riding about on closed roads in helmets and hi viz has to do with everyday cycling'. It seems, that in the opinion of at least one campaigner, the thousands of people inspired to turn up to such events are in some way 'less worthy' than others. On the one hand I can sympathise with this, apart from racing and a few local CTC events I tend to avoid most forms of 'organised cycling'. To me it seems a bit of a waste of money to pay £25 to ride a sportive when you can just go and ride the same roads for free and have money for beer and cakes instead. On the other hand (and this was reinforced by my experience of working with the Cycling Towns for Cycling England and more recently sitting with the LSTF team in Birmingham Council), cycling is an alien and scary concept to many people. They really do want the reassurance of closed roads and an organised event, and of course most of us get some sort of 'buzz' from taking part in something with lots of other people. Most of all its a fun day, and the underlying message is that you could have this much fun on a regular basis. Sky Ride may only yield a small number of new regular commuter cyclists per event, but it is raising the profile of cycling and attracting large numbers of riders in a way that smaller events can't, and for one day a year streets that are normally full of cars are given over to the bicycle, which can't really be a bad thing can it?
Cyclists seem particularly prone to division. We have the various 'national bodies' British Cycling, CTC, Sustrans most prominently, but also the Road Time Trials Council which pre-dates the controversial re-birth of massed start road racing in the UK in the 1950s which eventually led to the formation of British Cycling from the warring factions of the British League of Racing Cyclists and the National Cyclists Union. Families and clubs were split asunder by those who wanted to join the 'League' and be like the continentals, and the modest black-clad secretive British world of early morning time trials. Similarly the Clarion movement offered a socialist alternative to the 'gentleman's club' types in the early CTC. My neighbour, a rabid mountain biker, has a deep suspicion of 'roadies'. Asked whether he'd consider cyclo cross he said, "Really, to me that's just sitting on the fence, you're neither a roadie or a mountain biker!" Cycle campaigners also seem to fall into those who want more people to cycle, and therefore reach out to non/novice cyclists and those who want to make things better for existing cyclists, as well as divisions about what is required to achieve their aims. Obviously we need all types of campaigner, so this shouldn't be seen as a problem.
My own cycling activity since August. What type of cyclist am I? Two weeks cycle camping tour, 6 mile round trip to the railway station most days, 8-10 hours training on local roads, bridleways or extended commute rides each week, racing in the local cyclo cross league and Three Peaks race, doing site visits and travel to meetings as part of my consultancy work and often picking up some shopping on my way home. This weekend I covered 50 miles on Friday working in London on a site visit, an hour on local bridleways on Saturday and just got in from a 2 hour road ride today (Sunday). Is any one of these activities really 'better' than others. For most the alternative would be a car trip or sitting around doing something 'sedentary' but then I drive to races so that's arguably an extra car trip, and its one of the few times we actually use a car in our household.
The economic benefits of cycling derive from improved health (around 65% of benefit), reduced pollution, improved air quality and reductions in congestion. In theory, my recreational cycling has a lower value to the economy (Because I'm only really getting the health benefits) but of course living 1000 ft up in hilly West Yorkshire I wouldn't logically choose to ride my bike for all those utility trips as it is easier and faster to drive. The bottom line is, I mainly cycle to keep fit enough to be able to enjoy my leisure cycling, but the only time I can do this is by combining it with 'utility' trips. This seems to be the case for most club riders that I know. They may view themselves primarily as sports cyclists but their training run is often the daily commute. That's OK, but what about all the money given to National Parks through LSTF and Cycle Ambition? That money is purely for leisure cycling. Wouldn't it be better spent elsewhere in towns and cities? People only drive into the area, go for a ride on a trail and drive out again. Well, these people will still be getting some of the health benefits of regular cycling. Work funded by Cycling England found that many of the leisure cyclists surveyed were regular visitors from nearby. Anecdotal evidence from cycle hire/sales firms in national parks also suggests that people make 2 or 3 visits to hire a bike before returning to actually buy a bike on their 3rd or 4th trip. It was clear from the research that 'occasional' cyclists were becoming more regular cyclists, if not everyday cyclists. More importantly for rural economies there is a substantial weight of evidence that cyclists generally spend more (compared to car borne visitors who typically park, spend just 20 - 40 minutes in a place and then move on to the next place), supporting local businesses, especially if they prolong their stay overnight, which they will do if there is a network of leisure routes to explore. Cycling as the sole purpose of a leisure visit, or as a means of access and transport to other attractions in the countryside is therefore important in boosting rural economies and keeping visitors occupied, and therefore not driving their cars. In short, yes we should be investing in rural leisure cycling because its one of the ways in which people get introduced to more regular cycling and because it contributes to sustainable tourism.
Leeds Civic Centre is the venue where my own paid career as a consultant started. In 1996 I went to a talk at an open evening of the Leeds Cycle Campaign entitled 'Segregation or Integration'. After the talk, the speaker, a former member of the cycle campaign, offered me 6 weeks temporary work to go and help him write a local authority cycling strategy. I took a chance that it might lead to something more and luckily it did!
Unsurprisingly, in 1996 the cycle campaigning world was split. Some people loved the Dutch system and thought this was the way forward. The Danes in particular were embarking on major infrastructure improvements and Safe Routes to School at the time and I worked on a Sustrans pilot project to try to copy this approach in Leeds. Others (the majority in those days) felt that really we needed to remove motor traffic and reduce speeds so that cyclists would feel safe on the roads. This is the key to 'sustainable safety', reducing traffic danger to make the roads safer for all users.
It is thoroughly depressing that some people still take these 'sides' when its clear (and entirely consistent with Dutch and now Danish experience) that we need to do both. The 'segregation' countries only put cycle tracks where they are needed, and use a variety of measures to manage demand and reduce speeds to enable cyclists to safely share the roads in residential areas, town and city centres. They also do a lot of promotion and training. The Danes for example ran the successful 'Bikebusters' project where participants were given bicycles, locks, waterproof clothing, training and other support to take away every 'excuse' for not cycling. Even in their flat country with lots of infrastructure they had to work to build the number of cyclists. The 2012 edition of 'Collection of Cycle Concepts' details many other ways in which the Danes use training and promotion to increase cycling. The Colombians and Brazilians offer the 'Cyclovia' events to turn over the roads to cyclists, skaters and pedestrians on a Sunday. The Dutch offer cycle training to children, and specialist schemes to assist immigrant populations for whom cycling isn't a natural cultural choice.
The important thing is that all measures to increase cycling, whether through traffic reduction, training, mass participation events, inspirational Olympic success or building separate infrastructure help to broaden, strengthen and increase the cycling community. Lets not worry about what kind of cyclist we are, or whether we wear Lycra, Paul Smith, Laura Ashley or tweed. Vive le Difference!
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
The Proof of the Appelgebakken
It’s well known that there are more
bicycles than people in the Netherlands. It’s not surprising. Many people own a grubby ‘station bike’ that
can be parked all day at the local railway station, a nicer ‘town bike’ for
doing local shopping trips. The Dutch
are not a nation of ‘cyclists’ however, they just use bikes, along with trains,
buses, trams and cars as a mode of transport.
The vast majority of trips (72%) are short local trips under 5km, half
of these are less than 2.5km, and only 8% over 7.5km. The bike replaces both walking and driving as
a mode of transport for short journeys compared to UK behaviour. Cakes (especially apple cake), beer and coffee play a key role in
fuelling local transport. Imagine how
pleasant our towns would be if petrol stations were gradually replaced by cake
and coffee shops!
I have been fortunate to attend a number of
‘technical tours’ to the Netherlands since the 1990s, and my Masters degree was
administered by the NHL University in Leeuwarden, home of the Shared Space
Institute. I have spent very little time
as a casual visitor so this
year I took the opportunity to catch up with some Dutch friends and take a two-week
tour covering over 500 miles and taking in towns, cities and national parks around
the country (I visited Den Haag, Delft, Utrecht, Houten, Amsterdam, Arnhem, Nijmegen as well as the Utrecht Ridge, Hoog Veluwe and Zeeland national parks). I promised my wife not to bang on too much about infrastructure but here's a few observations and lessons for the UK.
Dutch traffic jam! |
Fietspad: A ‘Fietspad’ is the most basic form of
provision in the Netherlands. It is not compulsory to use them, but they can
offer a short-cut or quiet scenic route.
They can be anything from an unsurfaced single track footpath, a farm
track, a 1.5m – 2.0m surfaced strip alongside a dirt track, or a full 3.0m or
4.0m wide two-way cycle path. They are
almost always shared with pedestrians, but there are few pedestrians because most
people are on bikes. In rural areas the
surface is often gravel or sandy tracks - not great for UK style touring bikes laden
with luggage but fine for big tyre Dutch bikes.
I entered Den Haag
along tree-lined avenues where one side of the road was given over to a two-way
cycle track, with a narrow 1.0m footway alongside it and a wider footway on the
other side of the road. This arrangement
is quite typical on the main routes into towns and cities, and even in central
Amsterdam cycle contraflows are provided on what used to be the canal side
‘footway’ while pedestrians use the footway on the side of the road next to
buildings. It works perfectly well,
pedestrians seem to accept it and tourists who stray onto the cycle track soon
learn some Dutch swear words. Would it work in the UK where there are more
pedestrians than cyclists? Would it even get beyond public consultation? I’m
not sure but we can only learn by trying. The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco has one side reserved for pedestrians, the other for cyclists and on the whole it works, even in a car-centric culture such as the USA.
Cycle tracks: Cycle tracks
are provided alongside most busy and high speed roads in the Netherlands and in
such circumstances it is mandatory to use the track and illegal to use the
carriageway. The cut off point in
Netherlands design guidance for providing cycle tracks is about 3000 vehicles
per day. If this rule of thumb is
applied in the UK most roads require separate cycle tracks! The cycle track will sometimes take a
different and more circuitous route than the carriageway, occasionally three
sides around a field or away from a big junction. It is not uncommon for the cycle track to
swap from one side of the road to another at an uncontrolled crossing point
running diagonally across the road. The
tracks are generally 4.0m wide for two way use or 2.0m for one way use but
older ones are narrower. They always
have a sealed surface of concrete or tarmac but concrete block paving is also
widely used in urban areas, which can be slippery and uneven. The riding surfaces are generally good, but sometimes inferior to the adjacent carriageway tarmac.
Cycle
tracks are provided along busier roads and cycling is not permitted on the
carriageway.
There is usually no footway
in rural and suburban areas so pedestrians (and mopeds) also use this surface.
Centre line markings help to indicate two-way use. The amount of space
available to the verge and cycle track is as wide as the carriageway (the Dutch
guidelines recommend verge width of 4.5m to 6.0m in rural areas, 1.0m in
residential areas), so cyclists are well away from fast moving traffic and bus stops, filling stations etc don't cause conflict points. Side road crossings can be set back from the junction mouth. In the
UK the highway boundary is usually not so generous and a cycle track by a major
road is often just 0.5m from the carriageway which is noisy, unpleasant and
potentially hazardous especially at side roads. On motorways and
trunk roads in the Netherlands, the cycle route will typically run alongside a
parallel quiet road used for residential and farm access linked with short
sections of cycle track at any discontinuities.
The ‘Non-Motorised User Audit’ in the UK offers the opportunity to
develop this kind of approach when building or improving UK trunk roads and
other major infrastructure such as High Speed rail but it requires sufficient land allocation right from the start of the design process to accommodate the cycle track. It should be mandatory to provide this standard of track as part of the recently announced road building programme.
Junctions
Turning left (right in UK) on busy roads is usually
achieved by way of a two-stage turn, crossing one arm of the junction and then
the other. This is often done with a push button signal control, and the
cyclist may have to wait up to 30-40 seconds at each arm at busy locations
during peak traffic. This can be
frustrating at dual carriageways and major intersections where what could be
achieved in a single movement on the carriageway is replaced by 3 or 4 separate
moves, but this is the only way to avoid mixing with the traffic. In Amsterdam and some other cities there are
count-down displays at the signals to help discourage red light jumping by
cyclists. One feature that differs from the UK is that the cycle (and
pedestrian) crossing operates at the same time as the green for turning motor traffic,
which is obliged to give way to pedestrians and cyclists on the crossings. This helps reduce delay at the signals but it
can be a bit worrying to see an HGV turning into your path as you cross the
road. The traffic does (nearly) always stop though! This type of signal phasing needs to be trialled in the UK as it is not currently used and would require a national driver awareness programme.
At smaller signalled junctions and at less busy periods,
the cyclist is detected by an induction loop in the cycle track that triggers
the light automatically so it changes to green as you approach, or the cycle
track has priority over the carriageway.
This works well for cyclists because on the whole you can keep moving at
most junctions. It avoids much of the
‘stop start’ effort associated with segregated facilities where they are
provided in the UK. Keeping the cyclist moving is a big part of Dutch design. The additional effort required for each stop/start on a bike is equivalent to adding 200m to the journey, significant when most journeys by bike are very short. It also helps to eliminate problems of 'red light running' by eliminating the need to stop unnecessarily (e.g. for UK equivalent of turning left out of a side road there is usually no requirement to stop as the whole turn is done within separate cycle tracks and stopping is only required to cross motor traffic lanes).
At minor road junctions it is a requirement to give way to traffic from the right, even when travelling straight ahead, so drivers and cyclists generally take more care (than in the UK) when there are other vehicles in the vicinity of a junction.
At minor road junctions it is a requirement to give way to traffic from the right, even when travelling straight ahead, so drivers and cyclists generally take more care (than in the UK) when there are other vehicles in the vicinity of a junction.
Minor Roads
Outside urban centres the volume of motor traffic on all
roads is appreciably less than in the UK.
I think this is due to several factors:
·
Nearly all short local journeys
are on bike, so trips to the pub, the beach, to see friends and relations don’t
generate as much suburban and rural traffic. In particular many older and
younger people use bikes, so there are relatively few young drivers in ‘hot
hatches’ on the road, fewer people taking kids to school and activities by car,
and fewer elderly ‘Sunday driver’ types.
·
There are more quiet roads and
paths available for cycling – much of the Netherlands is on a grid pattern,
either in city streets or field boundaries with paths along dykes, canal banks,
farm tracks, minor roads and paths alongside large rivers all forming parts of
urban and rural cycle routes. There are therefore
many routes to choose from compared to hilly areas of the UK where transport is
concentrated into narrow corridors, so there is a dispersal effect on traffic;
·
There is relatively little ‘out
of town’ development compared to the UK, with few large supermarkets and
shopping malls. Life still revolves around
compact town and city centres with the larger stores placed at the edge of the
core area rather than completely separated .
·
The Netherlands has a
population of under 17m (404 per sq km), much of which is concentrated in the
conurbations around Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Utrecht. The UK population is 63m, largely
concentrated in England, particularly the south-east. London’s population
density is 5,200 per sq km compared to 3,500 per sq km in Amsterdam and its
total population is over three times greater. The Netherlands second largest city,
Rotterdam, has a population of 600,000, considerably less than Leeds,
Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham etc.
· Traffic is concentrated on the motorways and ‘A’ roads that provide good inter-urban connections. The lower categories of road generally do not provide good direct routes for cars, and this pattern is reinforced by limited crossing points of major rivers such as the Rhine and Maas as ferry services have limited capacity for cars and don’t carry HGVs.
· Traffic is concentrated on the motorways and ‘A’ roads that provide good inter-urban connections. The lower categories of road generally do not provide good direct routes for cars, and this pattern is reinforced by limited crossing points of major rivers such as the Rhine and Maas as ferry services have limited capacity for cars and don’t carry HGVs.
·
The Netherlands primary industry
is agriculture which generates relatively few trips.
· There is a much higher capacity of suburban rail services to enable bike-rail commuting.
The default provision along most minor
roads with speed limits up to 60kmh is cycle lanes or a shared road with no
markings at all. The width of such roads
is usually insufficient to allow a centre line and cycle lanes, so the centre line has been removed and replaced
with the cycle lanes, effectively changing the road from a double traffic lane
to a single lane. This treatment is
widely applied on roads with up to 300 pcu per hour (roughly 3,000 vehicles per 12
hour period) but becomes unacceptable due to the number of oncoming vehicle conflicts on roads with
over 400 pcu per hour.
The replacement of the centre line with cycle lanes makes a huge difference to the look and feel of the roads and helps reduce traffic speeds
If there is insufficient width for cycle
lanes, edge of carriageway markings are sometimes provided to visually narrow
the carriageway to a single lane as this helps reduce vehicle speeds. At danger points such as bridges, crests and
blind corners and sometimes at junctions the centre line is kept and the cycle lanes are
discontinued.
The cycle lanes are often only 1.0m wide,
but this is less of an issue than in the UK due to lower traffic volumes and
speeds. These roads are rarely bounded
by kerbs, and the concrete surface drainage is designed to enable vehicles to
over-run it on narrower roads. This
gives the cyclist a greater sense of space and separation compared to a UK road
of similar width that is bounded by kerbs and walls, often with drainage gulley grates in the carriageway.
Even on narrow roads cycle lanes are used to give clear dedicated space
On block paved roads through central and
residential areas the speed limit is almost always 30kmh and the cycle lane is marked by a change in the pattern of the
blockwork, but rarely with any paint or signs. These are ‘virtual’
cycle lanes with no legal meaning. They
are usually narrow (as the whole road width is typically 5 – 7 m) and may run
directly alongside parallel or echelon parking with no separating margin. It’s clear that they can have no real impact
on safety, but offer a sense of continuity and sometimes a smoother surface
than the all purpose lane. They are also
used where cyclists are allowed to contraflow on one-way streets, which is
virtually every one way street.
The key to success of these roads is
adherence to low traffic speed limits and the low flows of traffic so that
cyclists rarely feel threatened by passing vehicles. Opposing vehicles move from the centre of the
road into the cycle lanes to pass one another.
On the whole, Dutch drivers seem more content to hang back and wait
until it’s safe to pass although at busy times there is close overtaking and
cutting in as in the UK.
There are many minor roads throughout the
UK where this type of provision could be introduced. It works well on quiet
roads and in central areas of towns and villages with low (30kmh) speed limits. It is of less benefit if there is extensive
kerbside parking or high traffic flows.
Conclusion
It is difficult to know whether the Netherlands is really much 'quieter' than the UK or whether the fact that a mode share of 25% for cycling simply eliminates a high proportion of local car traffic making the roads so much more pleasant. I spent the last few days of my holiday in Zeeland, a popular holiday destination for Belgian and German tourists with poor rail connections. There was much more traffic on the roads and faster, more aggressive driving. The 'fietspads' were full of pedestrians instead of cyclists and suddenly the infrastructure that had seemed so ideal for the previous 10 days was not quite working so well. Similarly in some of the hilly areas around Nijmegen, highway space was constrained and consequently the quality of cycle infrastructure was compromised by the topography. There was some infrastructure just about everywhere, and consistently lower speed limits on roads where cyclists share the carriageway, so the almost daily UK experience of a 'near miss' when out cycling is a rarity in the Netherlands. Dutch cyclists are pretty poor at signalling, but they do 'look' carefully and interact with each other and drivers. There is rarely a requirement to move into the centre of the carriageway and 'take the lane' but on the other hand drivers seem to take extra care and be prepared to stop around junctions in the anticipation that cyclists will turn. This is in contrast to the UK where you may do everything correctly and still find yourself being undertaken/driven at by some outraged purple face motorist who 'pays road tax'!
The main lesson for the UK is that safety is not just about separate cycle tracks, its about the whole system of sustainable safety and minimising delays to cyclists, treating them with the same dignity and priority as other road users. There is no 'hierarchy of users' in the Netherlands. Bicyclists and pedestrians are not deemed 'more important' than cars and buses, but all users are considered in road design and the ideal solution takes account of the function of the road, the mix of traffic and the role of the route in the wider transport network.
The cycle tracks alongside the coast road in Zeeland fill up with pedestrians from nearby campsites in the summer.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)