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Royal Parks reveals plans to put speed bumps on cycle route in Hyde Park

Campaigners say that proposals “are not proportionate to the risks”

In a bid to reduce cycling speeds to 10mph, Royal Parks has revealed plans to build speed bumps on Broad Walk in Hyde Park. Radio 2’s Jeremy Vine has been among those to criticise similar measures employed in Kensington Gardens, describing the cobblestones used as being “so big it’s ridiculous.”

The London Evening Standard reports that the plan is to fit 28 rows of raised granite setts – or "rumble strips" – between Speakers Corner and Hyde Park Corner. New signage will also be put up, reminding cyclists of the presence of pedestrians.

Simon Richards, who leads The Royal Parks’ Cycling Board, said: “Everyone has to recognise that when they come into a park they’re entering a very different environment; for everyone’s sake we want to encourage cyclists to adjust their behaviour when moving from busy roads to peaceful paths, and similarly pedestrians need to be aware there are a whole variety of other users they have to watch out for.

“Our parks welcome a range of visitors, all of whom come to escape the hustle and bustle of the city. While we welcome cyclists and offer 68 miles of cycle routes, pathways and horse tracks, it is important we do all we can to ensure everyone can enjoy our parks in safety.”

The Royal Parks wants cyclists to ride at a “considerate cycling speed” of 8-12mph – although this is not legally enforceable.

Royal Parks statistics showed 1,200 cyclists used cycle paths through Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park during rush hour. 6.6 per cent were clocked riding at over 20mph, 29.5 per cent at 16-20mph, 43.1 per cent at 12-16mph, 13 per cent at 10-12mph and 7.7 per cent at 10mph or below.

One cyclist was clocked riding at 32mph.

There were no reported collisions between cyclists and pedestrians but two “near misses” a week were spotted.

A Royal Parks spokesman said: “If we have cyclists racing up and down a pathway at speed with pedestrians trying to cross that really doesn’t make for a pleasant visit, especially when we also have cases of pedestrians being shouted at for walking on pathways in the way of cyclists.”

Cobblestones were introduced last year on Mount Walk in Kensington Gardens and cyclists are reported to be either going round them onto the grass or speeding up to minimise the discomfort when going over them.

Radio 2 presenter Jeremy Vine – who was stopped for speeding in Hyde Park in 2014 (and was subsequently told that “there is no legal speed limit for cyclists in Hyde Park”) – said that he was a daily user of the Kensington path on his way to the BBC.

On Twitter, he said of the speed humps: "They are so big it's ridiculous." He added that a policeman had told him that they hadn't worked and were being removed.

London Cycling Campaign (LCC) said that the measure could hit the users most in need of cycling through the park hardest and would fail to address the real dangers.

“The Royal Parks have installed cycle speed bumps with cobbles in elsewhere in the parks and these have been a disaster. They are steep, uneven and hazardous to ride over. They are widely avoided by road bike riders with skinny tyres – with visible worn grass patches on either side of wherever they are installed.

“Worse, however, for those unable to avoid them – on adapted cycles, in wheelchairs etc – they represent a real barrier. The Royal Parks say these ones are a softer, gentler design - but we haven't seen their new design. And the previous designs don't give us confidence that the Parks fully understand the issues.”

LCC adds that Royal Parks has failed to take action regarding the dangers presented by motor vehicles in several parks.

“The Regent's Park has more collisions than the surrounding areas, vehicles doing high speeds and there is a scheme on the table to close key gates to get rid of through traffic – if The Royal Parks is intent on reducing danger in its park, removing through motor vehicle traffic from them should be a far higher priority than this excessive response to the issue of cycling speeds.”

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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32 comments

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to SingleSpeed | 7 years ago
1 like
SingleSpeed wrote:
Zjtm231 wrote:
derek n clive wrote:

LOL at London. What a sh*t place to live and ride.

Approximately 10m people seem to disagree with you enough to actually live here. All these separate cycle highways as well - how awful for cyclists!

 

I really do envy all those 10million people crammed into such a pollution filled hole, I hate having to live just 20 minutes ride from the nearest Beach and within an hour I'm at the top of HayTor breathing in some of the countries cleanest air with not a soul or car to see for miles...my lifestyle choice sucks.

 

 

As a Londoner who once had the chance to relocate to the part of the world you are referring to, but missed it due to bad decisions and bad luck, can I politely ask you to shut the hell up, because you are making me depressed.

Besides, London is better for cycling than much of the UK. It's _breathing_ that is the problem. If one could just get by without that, London would be a fine place to be.

Avatar
DaveE128 | 7 years ago
3 likes

Some people just can't be reasoned with can they? :'(

I'd just ride faster and bunny hop them. Doesn't really work on a boris bike or other utility bike though.  2

Stupid stupid stupid.

Of course, pedestrians crossing a cycle path with people riding at 20mph is so dangerous. Seeing as motor vehicles are so much heavier than bicycles and riders, will they be limiting them to 5mph? No, I didn't think so. They just hate cycling.

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