Friday, 2 September 2016

(not so)Quietway 6 - the joy of shared-use footways!

To say I'm unimpressed is quite an understatement!  

How can the same organisations and authorities get it so right with the East-West Cycle Superhighway, CS5, CS2/X/U and even much of Quietway 1 mess up so royally on this?!   

Here's what I sent to Tower Hamlets via their online form (you can respond in seconds and could win a £50 M&S card!): 

We all have our biases and pet peeves. What really grinds my gears is street designers often ignoring equality and safety laws by not giving safe routes for blind people or disabled cyclists in particular. 

Comments on entire scheme:

The designs will not enable cycling by all and are almost entirely unacceptable.  

Many young, old, disabled and utility cyclists / potential cyclists with either be totally excluded or very badly served by this route.  

The plans are almost entirely a collection of revised speed bumps and the raised tables - like we are seeing on most Quietway plans now.    

Wasting so much money on surfacing and paving is wrong, but when it is proposed to spend absolutely nothing on dedicated, accessible cycling infrastructure, it would be unforgivable.  

To have not even one metre of dedicated cycle track on a major cycle route like this is utterly insane.   

The designs retain and introduce many dangerous pinch points.  Instead of pinch points, point closures and filters should be used instead.  

The route is bizarre and indirect, repeatedly being routed onto footways, which is totally inappropriate for a major cycle route in an urban environment.

Not a single road on the route will be a formal Cycle Street.  Why?  If the streets are to be quiet enough for a Quietway, they will be suitable to be designated Cycle Streets.  You can't do a proper route like this on back streets without creating genuine Cycle Streets, where cars are treated as guests.  

Whilst ASLs (advance stop lines) are not an ideal form of cycle infrastructure, the near total absence of them on a route like this with no cycle tracks is unacceptable. 

Comments on specific proposals:
1. Junction narrowing only appropriate if motor traffic banned.  Current plan brings cycles and motor vehicles into conflict. Continuous footway a good thing, but should not be paid for from cycling budget.

2. Raised corner could increase risk to pedestrians.  Another pinch point is included. Extra general parking space included - new parking spaces should be for either electric cars or disabled bays.  

2.2 - More road humps and a 'Jeremy Vine' design.  A narrow road with parking on either side that isn't a designated Cycle Street will cause conflict.  Many drivers do not understand that cyclists are meant to ride in the middle of the carriageway in such circumstances, and will harass and abuse them, like happened to Jeremy Vine recently.  Unless the road is properly filtered and designated a Cycle Street, it will be dangerous and unpleasant.  

3. The parking bays on the north side of Worley Street and the end of Morpeth Street should be reduced to improve visibility.  Consideration should be give to altering the corner to be a formal junction giving clear priority to the cycle route. 

4. Bollard position at park entrance could make it inaccessible to cycles used by disabled people.  No bollard should be used at all unless there is a proven need for one.  Yet another altered speed bump is pretty much all that is offered.   4.2 Unsegregated shared-use footpaths are totally unsuitable for a major cycle route.  This will cause such significantly poor levels of service and comfort for many disabled people, especially blind and deaf people - to an extent that is probably illegal under the Equality Act.  An Equality Impact Assessment will be required.  There is ample space to have separate cycle and foot paths.  Mixing high volumes of cyclists and pedestrians is totally inappropriate and breeds conflict.  

5. See comments to 4.2. Further use of shared space that causes conflict and a bollard that is inaccessible and will cause injuries. 

6. Another proposal for an illegally-discriminatory shared footway.  The junction will require cyclists to make movements and be positioned on parts of the road that drivers will not be expecting.  A separate cycle track should be built that connects directly to Arbery Road and would thus not require any cyclists to use the footway.  A giraffe crossing instead of a Toucan would be more appropriate.  

7. Shared-use footway without tactile paving is extremely dangerous.  Instead, a clearly-delineated cycle track should connect Viking Close and Lyall Road.  Extending double yellow lines is essential and welcome.  The narrow usable carriageway of Saxon Road will bring drivers and cyclists into conflict, this could be reduced by removing parking bays or changing the road to become a Home Zone or Cycle Street. 

8. Middle bollard at end of Sutherland Road and at junction with Cardigan Road is unnecessary and inaccessible.  Use of shared footpaths highly undesirable and likely to provoke conflict.  Route unsuitable for high volumes of cyclists. 

9. Removing the islands is welcome, bollards should be wide enough to permit use by all kinds of cycles, especially those used by disabled people.  Keep clear hatching welcome.  Junctions in this section will only work if there are very low levels of slow-moving motor traffic - if traffic is heavy and/or fast, then more filtering will be required. 

10. Relocation of parking welcome.  Pedestrians refuges cause pinch points and no-overtaking cyclists signs would be required if they are to be retained.  Raised table of questionable benefit without filtering.  Parking should be prioritised for disabled people - at least some of relocated bays should be disabled bays.  There are grossly-insufficient wayfinding signage and symbols proposed it is totally unclear where the cycle route even goes.  

11. Yet more unnecessary shared-use footways.  There is no reason whatsoever not to have a clearly-delineated cycle track separate from the footway through this section.  Again, this section will create unnecessary pedestrian-cyclist conflict that will be particularly severe for blind and deaf people.  Moving the fence to create space is welcome and makes a defined cycle track and separate footway even more possible.  The cycle track should connect directly to the road, not go via a footway.  The retention of the bollards will cause serious difficulties for cyclists in accessible/recumbent/cargo bikes to continue North.  The design of the shared footway will encourage cyclists to be positioned in unexpected places on the road and cause conflict and collisions.  

12. Instead of having buff-painted borders, cycle lanes or tracks should be used.  It is unclear why chevrons will be used here and nowhere else on the route. These would be unnecessary if the road was a Cycle Street.  Cycle symbols in the middle of a lane are meant to indicate to all where cyclists should ride-however that only happens in the minds of planners.  Almost no-one understands what these symbols mean.  The bus stop location is extremely dangerous, covering the end of a T-junction.  Instead it should be located further north and instead of inset parking, a bus stop bypass should be used.  Alternatively the bus route(s) should be moved to another nearby street.  There is an extremely dangerous pinch-point at the junction of Cedar Close and Parnell Road, with no ASL or filtering.Resoond here now!

Monday, 4 January 2016

Wandsworth Town Centre cycle tracks - sign the petition

Petition started at Change.org, please sign it! 

To make it easier to register a protest about TfL's awful plans for Wandsworth Town Centre, I've created a petition.  Please take a moment to sign it.  

If you want more info or to give detailed feedback, there are links to the formal consultation on both the petition page and my last blog post (which is by far the most viewed post I've ever written!). 

Thanks for your support! 

Friday, 1 January 2016

Plea for help! TfL's Wandsworth Gyratory plans are a travesty - but will anyone say so?!

After some thought, I decided to edit this post.  A lot.

It originally had a load of waffle about lots of worthy stuff, but can be summed up so much more easily and clearly (I hope!)...

Where are the cycle tracks for Wandsworth TfL?!


(See https://consultations.tfl.gov.uk/roads/wandsworth-town-centre - deadline 17/1)

TfL are upgrading lots of major junctions and every similar project includes protected cycleways...

Except Wandsworth Town Centre.

Did we do something wrong?

The ONLY way you can enable young children, older and disabled people to get around safely on bikes around heavy vehicles in a town centre is to physically protect them with kerbed cycle tracks and low&slow traffic streets.

The cycle tracks being planned or built at Elephant & Castle, Aldgate, Stockwell, Archway, Vauxhall, Whipps Cross Roundabout, Blackfriars, Westminster Bridge South, etc, etc, aren't perfect, but at least there are some!

Cycle tracks are also brilliant for scooter users, wheelchair users and all other kinds of human on wheels.  They also significantly reduce the pollution inhaled by pedestrians and make driving less stressful and faster for motor vehicle drivers.

Yes roadspace has to be reallocated, but it does when we build footpaths.  There is no evidence of proper cycle tracks ever causing delays for drivers - all those studied showed faster journeys for drivers in every example but one, where there was no change.

Protected cycle tracks benefit everyone.  They can only do that when we build them.  Despite our hostile roads, Wandsworth's commuter cycling levels are already double the London average and over half of residents own bikes.

If you have some time to spare to help fight for decent #spaceforcycling in Wandsworth, please get in touch.

Please take just a couple of minutes to ask TfL (before 17 January 2016) to build a proper cycle network in Wandsworth.  One that exists on more than a PowerPoint slide.



PS Previous comments have been retained but deleted from public view as they don't relate well to this modified post and some included mention of other people and I don't have time to ensure they get a right to reply.

PPS I know that the minute section of segregated cycle track on one corner of Wandsworth Roundabout will be retained.  Not the TfL took much effort to highlight that.  I can't think why.

PPPS Oh no, I can.

PPPPS Give em hell! Grrr...

Why I am not supporting the 'Save Wandsworth Common' Crossrail 2 campaign.

... well, it's about time I restarted this blog!  I've been surprised by how many people have read my posts and started to follow me on Twitter, so thanks for taking the time to read what I have to say, it's your views and support that has got me back at the keyboard.

Sorry for the long delay since my last post, sometimes this being sick and disabled thing can be a royal pain in the backside!!  So, after a couple of operations, loads of different medicines and a gruelling physio/rehab programme, I'm hopefully going to be able to write a bit more often.  Life is still a major struggle, but at least I'm getting over a particularly horrid patch.

Hope it's not all waffle, but no promises ;-P

Below is a copy of my post on the Wandsworth Gaurdian's website in response to the 'Save Wandsworth Common' (sic) campaign that has restarted following TfL's announcement of a planned route change.  As the Common is effectively my front garden, I think this qualifies me for a 'I'm not a NIMBY' badge!

I can't promise to be able to debate this, but alternative viewpoints are welcome in the Comments.

"I live opposite the Common, where the shaft is planned and can't support this campaign based on the information available.  And I'm not sure why all the vitriol is being directed at a local councillor when this is a TfL decision...

If it will cost an extra £500 million to go via Tooting, where is the money coming from.  Put it into perspective: the entire cycling budget for TfL for all of greater London (which funds most borough cycling projects too) is less than £98 million per year.  £500 million could pay for a brand new hospital or an entire tram line.  We can't just be NIMBYs, we need to have a logical alternative and none has yet been suggested.

The other options if Balham is chosen all involve demolishing homes, churches, schools and/or businesses.

And the killer argument for me is: what about the frikkin railway lines?!  The planned shaft will take a tiny piece of land.  The railway lines that bisect the Common take tons of land and how many people campaign for them to be ripped out or put in tunnels?  None (well apart from me who keeps suggesting that at least some of the rail track gets covered by a green bridge and getting zero support from the ranty NIMBYs who just prefer to say No to everything).

It makes no sense to support the railway lines (which were built on land that used to be part of the Common), but not this single shaft that is necessary to deliver a vital new public transport service serving millions of people.

Sometimes, we need to recognise that our fear of change distorts our perceptions and encourages us to make illogical decisions.  This is one of those times.  The idea of our lovely Common being a building site for a long time isn't nice but I'm sure people felt the same when the railway lines were built.

The shaft will help take cars off the roads.  The roads around the Common suffer traffic jams every day and the pollution levels on the roads around the Common are a disgrace.  That is a real threat to us all - hundreds of Wandsworth residents die early from pollution and thousands from lack of exercise every year.  That's not just stats.  It's our friends, our families, ourselves who suffer and die early for no good reason.

Why not campaign for something that would improve the Common?  If not my green bridge idea, by placing cycle tracks between the roads and the footpaths around the Common, we could hugely reduce the pollution inhaled by pedestrians, get cyclists off the pavements, give people a proper alternative to driving local trips, reduce collisions and reduce the increasing volume of cyclists using the ++awful shared-use footpaths on the Common.  We could also create 'pocket parks', adding more greenery to streets surrounding the Common.  Please respond to the consultation, but please also try to make some sensible suggestions as just saying No isn't likely to achieve much."