Is It Just Me That Thinks This Cycle Highway Is A Joke?

Is It Just Me That Thinks This Cycle Highway Is A Joke?

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ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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Rich_W said:
"Perception" is that motorcyclists tend to bring their downfall on themselves. Mainly because they are seen, or more accurately heard, screaming around.

Now obviously that doesn't mean every biker. But even as a full licence holder. I saw 2 bikers this morning being dheads. 1 overtook me and another car by going the wrong way round a roundabout. The other overtook a car at the exact time a car coming the other way was level with it. I genuinely thought he was going to be squished! Both these instances were at 7am on a Saturday! Where was the need? As it happens the nearly squished arrived at the gym I go to all of 20 seconds before me. Filtering and overtaking is fine. But sometimes you don't wonder why many riders end up in trouble

Everyone "knows" a biker that's had an accident. There's the "organ donor" tag. A guy I used to work with showed the huge scar he had on his forearm (and subsequent pay out) as a badge of honor.

That's what people think. So as above, until the biking lobby get their act together and identify the real cause of accidents in cities, most probably SMIDSY, it won't change. Even the government? ads on the TV where the bike is filtering and car turns right whilst indicating across the bike is stupid. Since that would be the bikes fault for not seeing the indicator and anticipating the turn.

Edited by Rich_W on Saturday 31st January 23:57
TFL's own figures show that bikers are normally involved in accidents during the morning & evening rush hour with over 80% being caused by other vehicles.

I agree bikers have an image of racing around the streets but when we say bikers the majority of bikers in London will be on Scooters

gazza285

9,806 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
gazza285 said:
Most cyclist deaths are in the morning rush hour, most motorcyclist deaths are on a Sunday afternoon. Most of both are caused by other people.

Too many cars is the problem, I think, with most of them being parked on the road, and in the local cycle lanes around here. The biggest cause of congestion on my way to work is navigating round parked cars, either double parked, or reducing a two lane each way into a single each way. There are lots of posts on here about parking problems, so how about some new car parks being built? Nowhere off road to park? Then no car.
In London most Motorcycle accidents occur in the Morning & Evening Rush Hour not on Sunday!
In the dead cyclist thread you suggested that cyclists need more training to stop them dying, why are you not suggesting that motorcyclists need more training as well?

Perhaps the cyclists and motorcyclists are not the problem here...

TheInternet

4,712 posts

163 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
Drivers who are frustrated at sitting in traffic jams are going to be less likely to care about those around them therefore leaving the most Vulnerable group in more danger with less tarmac to play with.
But if those people are in their own new lane as proposed then the danger will be lessened? The broad, smooth bit of blue lane will go some way to help keep their legs going and smiles steadfast on their face, and that is health benefit 1 & 2.

Also note that the peddlers take the least out of the road network and effectively provide miles and miles of empty road for the other traffic. When you see a cycle think about the 5m of road they have given you. Maybe knowing that puts a smile on your face, and the thought that they are selflessly taking the biggest risks so you can enjoy the road in London.

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
Pelo said:
A large part of the appeal of segregated cycle lanes is to attract new cyclists. Put simply, "Would you let your kids ride on that piece of road?"
It follows that if the road feels safe, then more people will use it. Segregated cycle lanes allow "interested but concerned" riders to travel further and feel safer.
More people cycling potentially means less people driving, less pollution, and less traffic. So that extra car lane may not even be missed! smile
Let's be real here, so your saying is the cycle lanes being segregated is in the hope of making more people cycle? So you'd want to ride along roads where vehicles are at their least efficient putting out the worst of their fumes sitting in traffic.

What about if people decide to get on Motorbikes or not get out of the car? What happens then?

Edited by ZX10R NIN on Sunday 1st February 01:32

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
gazza285 said:
In the dead cyclist thread you suggested that cyclists need more training to stop them dying, why are you not suggesting that motorcyclists need more training as well?

Perhaps the cyclists and motorcyclists are not the problem here...
Motorcyclists changed in 2014 so it'll be interesting to see the results for 2015, everyone is the problem here but taking away road space won't help the situation.

I still believe Cyclists who commute should receive some form of training

Edited by ZX10R NIN on Sunday 1st February 00:49

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
TheInternet said:
But if those people are in their own new lane as proposed then the danger will be lessened? The broad, smooth bit of blue lane will go some way to help keep their legs going and smiles steadfast on their face, and that is health benefit 1 & 2.

Also note that the peddlers take the least out of the road network and effectively provide miles and miles of empty road for the other traffic. When you see a cycle think about the 5m of road they have given you. Maybe knowing that puts a smile on your face, and the thought that they are selflessly taking the biggest risks so you can enjoy the road in London.
Are you suggesting Motorcycles use the cycle lanes to? So we to can (as the group most likely to be seriously injured) selflessly allow the cars buses trucks the limited space that will be left.

Also a Motorcycle will take up the same foot print as a push bike if it's a small scooter or motorbike even a 600cc motorbike will take up a very similar amount of space.



Edited by ZX10R NIN on Sunday 1st February 00:59

gazza285

9,806 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
ZX10R NIN said:
TheInternet said:
But if those people are in their own new lane as proposed then the danger will be lessened? The broad, smooth bit of blue lane will go some way to help keep their legs going and smiles steadfast on their face, and that is health benefit 1 & 2.

Also note that the peddlers take the least out of the road network and effectively provide miles and miles of empty road for the other traffic. When you see a cycle think about the 5m of road they have given you. Maybe knowing that puts a smile on your face, and the thought that they are selflessly taking the biggest risks so you can enjoy the road in London.
Are you suggesting Motorcycles use the cycle lanes too?
He's just not paying attention and presumed the most vulnerable road users are on push irons, and after you'd capitalised it and everything.

The cyclists and bikers have more in common than you think.

TheInternet

4,712 posts

163 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
Are you suggesting Motorcycles use the cycle lanes to?
No, the cycle lanes need to be preserved. I advocate motorcycles in bus lanes, however.

gazza285

9,806 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
Are you suggesting Motorcycles use the cycle lanes to?
I'm thinking that would be a good idea, as long as the bikers keep their speed to 20mph, which is the same as the "serious" cyclists will be doing.

Edited to say that 20 mph will be faster than the average road speed in London.

gazza285

9,806 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
TheInternet said:
ZX10R NIN said:
Are you suggesting Motorcycles use the cycle lanes to?
No, the cycle lanes need to be preserved. I advocate motorcycles in bus lanes, however.
Great idea, as long as the buses have a proper off-the-road bus stop to pull into, like we used to have, so not to get in the cyclists of both distinction's way.

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
gazza285 said:
Great idea, as long as the buses have a proper off-the-road bus stop to pull into, like we used to have, so not to get in the cyclists of both distinction's way.
Bikers are allowed in the bus lanes despite lots of protests from Cycle groups. They said there'd be more accidents between motorbikes & pushbikes so far there have been none but the protests were really strong it did make me smile.

I do think Motorbikes in the superhighway Cycle lanes is a good idea though

gazza285

9,806 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
ZX10R NIN said:
gazza285 said:
Great idea, as long as the buses have a proper off-the-road bus stop to pull into, like we used to have, so not to get in the cyclists of both distinction's way.
Bikers are allowed in the bus lanes despite lots of protests from Cycle groups. They said there'd be more accidents between motorbikes & pushbikes so far there have been none but the protests were really strong it did make me smile.

I do think Motorbikes in the superhighway Cycle lanes is a good idea though
We agree on something? Crikey Moses.

Do you have a source for the cyclists against motorcyclists in bus lanes? No complaints up here, it's all two wheels good...

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
gazza285 said:
We agree on something? Crikey Moses.

Do you have a source for the cyclists against motorcyclists in bus lanes? No complaints up here, it's all two wheels good...
Crikey we agree? beer lol

Just remember seeing a report from TFL in MCN after the trial & the number of accidents involving PB's & MB's was 0, the number off accidents involving Motorbikes dropped to hence why MB's are allowed in the bus lanes, to be fair I don't know if there have ever been serious collisions between Pushbikes & Motorbikes. I do know that cyclists were lobbying against it because of the potential speed differential.

I'm sure the day a Motorbike is involved in a serious accident with a Pushbike, the Cyclists will be lobbying to get us out of them again.


As I said in the first post my argument isn't with cyclists it's about bad planning of the road network, no one drives into London unless they have to the whole system seems to now be designed to slow you down & make you sit in traffic (hence why I mainly take the motorbike) the planners seem to have gone out of their way to create pinch point New Cross one system Trafalgar Sq to name a few. I have to drive an Artic into London occasionally & it frustrates me at the amount of badly thought out new junctions & road layout there are.

These plans seem to fly in the face of improving air quality, They keep on harping on about getting London MOVING rolleyes yet they're doing nothing of the sort instead they're taking much needed Road space from the people that have put the most in.

I think cyclists should be treated the same as every other road user & get what everyone else has to put up with, then start lobbying for better planning also would Cyclists be as happy if they had to start paying for this cycle network?

I know you don't like the raised cycle lanes but do you cyclists really believe taking a lane out of one of the main arteries of Central London will help?

Surely there must be a better way than this.

heebeegeetee

28,686 posts

248 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
I think cyclists should be treated the same as every other road user & get what everyone else has to put up with, then start lobbying for better planning also would Cyclists be as happy if they had to start paying for this cycle network?
I agree that cyclists should be treated the same as everyone else, and they should get far more road space because right now they're getting virtually nothing.

Cyclists are paying for the cycling network - like everybody else, they have no choice.

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
heebeegeetee said:
I agree that cyclists should be treated the same as everyone else, and they should get far more road space because right now they're getting virtually nothing.

Cyclists are paying for the cycling network - like everybody else, they have no choice.
No you're paying council tax which can be spent anywhere the Mayor decides, other Road Users are paying for the Road Network admittedly only 30% of it is going on the actual roads but I'm still paying.

I have cars & a motorbike(my choice to have more than one vehicle) I have to pay for all of them to use the road network.

A 100 million spent making the roads Half a metre wider on each side of the road along the main arteries of London obviously this can only happen in places where the pavement is wide enough but it would be a start.

Please tell me why this super cycle lane is such a good idea?

ZX10R NIN

Original Poster:

27,572 posts

125 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
thelawnet said:
Depends on your definition of vulnerable
Okay what's YOUR definition of the most vulnerable because the way it's been portrayed on PH by cyclists was that they were the road user most likely to die on London's Rd's

Dammit

3,790 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
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ZX10R NIN said:
No you're paying council tax which can be spent anywhere the Mayor decides, other Road Users are paying for the Road Network admittedly only 30% of it is going on the actual roads but I'm still paying.

I have cars & a motorbike(my choice to have more than one vehicle) I have to pay for all of them to use the road network.

A 100 million spent making the roads Half a metre wider on each side of the road along the main arteries of London obviously this can only happen in places where the pavement is wide enough but it would be a start.

Please tell me why this super cycle lane is such a good idea?
Erm, you what?

How are "other road users paying for the road network"?

I suspect you don't understand how the roads are funded - cyclists pay taxes just like everyone else, often more as cyclists typically earn more than none cyclists.

Motorcycles in bus lanes - I'm ok-ish with this, the majority of motorcyclists can share the road quite well, but some of them simply try to bully there way past, and a motorcycle does take up significantly more road-space than a bicycle.

Motorcycles in the bike lane - no, that's a crazy idea given that a major part of the goal for these things is to get nervous/first time cyclists onto the roads. Having your first cycle with a bloke on a motorcycle trying to push you into the gutter is insane.

OP - you say your commute is "too far" to cycle, how far is it?

Hoofy

76,330 posts

282 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
Pelo said:
Hoofy said:
...
I can't help thinking, therefore, that if we didn't have the lanes and in fact made the lane into an extra lane for cars (or wider lanes for cars depending on space), cyclists would still be fine and probably actually be safer as cars would have more space to drive round them.

Eg: https://goo.gl/maps/Xk0To
...
A large part of the appeal of segregated cycle lanes is to attract new cyclists. Put simply, "Would you let your kids ride on that piece of road?"
It follows that if the road feels safe, then more people will use it. Segregated cycle lanes allow "interested but concerned" riders to travel further and feel safer.
More people cycling potentially means less people driving, less pollution, and less traffic. So that extra car lane may not even be missed! smile
True. But it only lasts the length of the bridge in this example then it's back to narrow streets. biggrin And if they put a segregated cycle lane on the narrow streets, I'm not sure how any motorised transport would manage to pass by.

Dammit

3,790 posts

208 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
You mean pass by as in overtake?

Banana Boy

467 posts

113 months

Sunday 1st February 2015
quotequote all
ZX10R NIN said:
No you're paying council tax which can be spent anywhere the Mayor decides, other Road Users are paying for the Road Network admittedly only 30% of it is going on the actual roads but I'm still paying.

I have cars & a motorbike(my choice to have more than one vehicle) I have to pay for all of them to use the road network.

A 100 million spent making the roads Half a metre wider on each side of the road along the main arteries of London obviously this can only happen in places where the pavement is wide enough but it would be a start.

Please tell me why this super cycle lane is such a good idea?
So you've posted on a cycling forum looking for support rubbishing a scheme designed to help and protect cyclists...

Also we're ALL paying for the building and maintenance of the highways through VED, Council Tax, Income Tax and VAT etc. 'Road Tax' hasn't existed for over 75 years! (Like many cyclists I pay all of these taxes, I suspect that unless you can find a tree hugging hippie that has manufactured their entire existence from hemp and handouts, most cyclists have contributed in one way or another!)

www.ipayroadtax.com
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-23694438

While I think your tone is aggressive and misplaced (it's not the common cyclists fault that schemes like this are dreamt up!) I agree that integration is generally better than separation.

We all have two major problems when it comes to government road building schemes; firstly the motorist has ruled the roost for too long, for many reasons (money, money, money) our road networks have been tailored to suit the motor industries. Secondly, while the rest of the world is building wider more open roads to accommodate all road users our government and planners are making our highways narrower and less inclusive?! I suspect this is mostly down to the all powerful property boom that puts the value of a square meter of retailable land above everything else.

Ultimately the real answer is an increased awareness and respect from all sides of the divides. A change in attitudes would be a million times cheaper than any road scheme!