London commuting
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Discussion

Biker9090

Original Poster:

1,538 posts

54 months

Thursday
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I had to go into London yesterday for a relatives wake at the Bike Shed.

First time riding in central London for a few years (tbh I've only done it a handful of times as I'm usually drinking or my old jon used to pay for train costs).

I cannot understand how those of you who routinely do it cope?

It seems like it's gotten exponentially worse since I last went in via bike with an ever increasing number of 20mph cameras, worse than ever cyclists (with many obviously now being electric powered),infrastructure making roads ever narrower and removing many filtering spots (adv style bike so very wide bars) - the list goes on.

I get the idea of remaining calm (I'm even medicated for it) but it'd put me in an early grave I swear. I thought other cities (UK and Europe) were a pain to ride around.....

I'm curious as to how many of you who work there still go in by bike? Do you do it year round? Regardless of wfh do you still choose the bike when you do go in? I can't imagaine how much of a PITA it would be in the dark and rain of a rush hour evening.

MDUBZ

1,038 posts

117 months

Thursday
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You travelled in during the summer holidays... it's quiet!

Once you know the route and have worked out how best to make progress it's really no bother.

Edit: bike in 3 days a week all year.. if it is icy I'll work from home (1 or 2 days last year). Parking outside the office, I have a locker and access to showers. Speed limits and road markings treated as advisory.

Options:
Train+ parking is ~£70 a day, cramped, unreliable, i have low people tolerance, pretty sure I pick up all manner of colds etc.

Car too slow and no parking near by.

The bike is a no brainer for me fuel per week is less than 1 day on the train and it's the best bit of my day.


Edited by MDUBZ on Friday 29th August 10:31

black-k1

12,498 posts

246 months

Thursday
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Like you, I now rarely go into London and, when I do, I find the changes in speed limits, enforcement, traffic restrictions etc. frustrating. That said, I also think there is less traffic than there used to be and find that journey times have not significantly changed.

TVR Sagaris

1,121 posts

249 months

Thursday
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It's post-covid when the most dramatic changes happened; as you say, the 20mph zones everywhere and low traffic neighbourhoods add a lot of pain to getting around. But that's all still much easier to deal with on a bike than in a car and public transport has got back to being as busy as it was pre-covid so the incentives are still there!

SteelerSE

2,000 posts

173 months

Thursday
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Biker9090 said:
I'm curious as to how many of you who work there still go in by bike? Do you do it year round? Regardless of wfh do you still choose the bike when you do go in? I can't imagaine how much of a PITA it would be in the dark and rain of a rush hour evening.
I go in about once a week on the bike. It's about £50/day if I take the train and my bike owes me nothing. Instead of being 2 hrs door to door IF the trains are working then I have a fairly standard 1hr in and 1hr30 back out on the bike.

The traffic does suck but it is key that you have a good route and I arrive by 7am to avoid the worst of the traffic and try to leave early.

kiethton

14,299 posts

197 months

Thursday
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Commute all year round (unless it's raining/minus temps).

As others have said the knowledge that if public transport is fked you're still getting home helps. I also get into the bike bays before 6:45am and normally leave the office at ~7pm so miss the worst of it.

After a few days you know where the cameras/ok to ride in bus lanes are. 20 speed limits can then be ignored (like 99% of cars).

GreaseNipple

468 posts

258 months

Thursday
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I love riding in London, it's one of the best use cases of a motorbike imo but obviously with parking being ever restricted and the crime it's getting worse and worse. One of my most memorable rides was following a Moto Guzzi le mans as we were both enthusiasticly filtering through the traffic and pulling up at some lights to see a 60+ old boy give me the thumbs up and carry on for another 15-20 mins thumbup

Dick Seaman

1,091 posts

240 months

I reverse commute a couple of times each week. Live in central London and need to get 40 miles out into Surrey. Public transport links don't work for the location, so it's car or bike. Always take the bike (CBR600RR) unless the weather is awful, occasional car journeys are the perfect way to remind yourself why bikes are so good in London.

As said before, gaining experience on a chosen route makes the whole process more enjoyable and safer. One regular issue I notice is pedestrians crossing the road between stationary traffic, never checking for bikes, so I filter reasonably cautiously when sight is restricted. Apart from that it's an entertaining game smile

Gixer968CS

777 posts

105 months

I ride in to Moorgate from Kent 3 times a week. A c60 miles roundtrip. TBH once you're familiar with the route it becomes a lot less stressful as you obviously get to know the flow at junctions, the speed limits, restrictions etc. Also, I'm lucky as my commute is mainly on quite wide roads. I ride all year round but now often bail from cJan-April when it's wet, dark and cold as my eyes aren't so good in those conditions.

We could debate whether it's cheaper than the train (about a third of the daily cost, but add wear and tear, depreciation, tyres, servicing etc and it adds up) but I do it because I prefer it. I'm never late, I don't have to leave at a certain time, I have my radio on in the helmet and, most importantly, I don't have to mix with the general public, which is increasingly an appalling experience - phones on speaker, angst, rudeness, snotty sniffing etc etc.

Cyclists in London can be a wind up if I let them - don't obey the highway code, ignore red lights, ride too fast etc etc but I've come to expect all that and usually their poor behaviour is a risk to themselves and pedestrians and not to me so I try not to let it get to me.

Most of the time I'd much rather be on the bike than the train.