Transport for London is charging boroughs up to £2 million to bring the Barclays Cycle Hire Scheme within their boundaries, reports the London Evening Standard. The news comes as the scheme, launched in July 2010, prepares for its second phase of expansion, which will take it into the London Borough of Wandsworth for the first time as well as increasing its footprint elsewhere in South and West London.
According to the newspaper, the cash from the boroughs concerned is being sought to help offset the construction costs required to install docking stations, with the newspaper pointing out that to date, scheme sponsor Barclays has paid only £13.4 million of the total £50 million it has pledged to provide over the eight-year term of the deal.
Those figures were published in December by the website MayorWatch, which described the scheme as a financial “black hole,” saying it said would cost London’s taxpayers £225 million by 2015/16, although it should be noted that the money paid by Barclays during the first two years is in line with what might be expected assuming the payments were to be staggered equally across all eight years.
It’s the up-front costs however that seem to be causing the problems, and news of the cash input required from boroughs comes after the cost to use the scheme doubled last month, with 24-hour access, for example, rising from £1 to £2.
In the next wave of expansion, due for completion by Spring next year and seeing 265 new docking stations come into operation and 2,000 more bikes taking the total to 10,000, Wandsworth is the only borough that will welcome the scheme for the first time. It will pay TfL £2 million, according to the Standard, with the bikes deployed in Battersea, Putney and Wandsworth town itself.
The borough’s transport spokesman, Councillor Russell King, commented: “We want this extension to be the first step towards borough-wide coverage.”
Also stumping up a reported £2 million is Hammersmith & Fulham, where currently, the cycle hire zone only covers the area around the Westfield shopping centre at Shepherds Bush.
Those figures are higher than the £1.9 million that Tower Hamlets paid when the scheme was extended eastwards ahead of last summer’s Olympic Games.
Lambeth, where Boris Bikes at the moment are only found in the northern half of the borough, will pay £200,000 to expand it southwards, while Kensington & Chelsea, which is expanding the scheme into some parts of the borough not covered by the original hire zone, is spending £400,000.
The Standard reports that currently, 36 planning applications for the new docking stations have been granted out of 150 submitted to date, with TfL commissioner Sir Peter Hendy saying: “The scheme is generally well supported and most sites are not attracting significant objections.
“The team are working closely with the boroughs to address concerns in some sensitive and high-profile areas, as there is a risk of gaps in the network if these sites are reviewed.”
Although no further expansion of the scheme has yet been announced, it has been mooted to take it to some town centres in Outer London boroughs.
"braking zone" This is about bunch riding.
Riding in primary wouldn't stop a motorist crossing the white line to overtake: arguably, it would encourage them to cross the white line giving...
Cycling infrastructure does not force drivers to break the law, drivers are the reason they break the law, no one else.
Ah but taking pictures of things to defy the man (avoid a fine) is righteous. Taking pictures of people to grass on them to the cops (perhaps...
Never had a Shimano QR fail on me. They just work. And the top end ones look good too....
As a woman, this works great for me! My chain broke once, and a kind guy stopped with a chain breaker and sorted it all out for me. We stopped at a...
Same. I also have gone through a bunch of their tyres, and only the extralight disappointed (torn sidewall) but the standards are fantastic....
thanks for the ideas....
Indeed - but it's no more inconsistent than our current road design - very often UK high streets are "for shopping" and also a busy through route....
If you ask the world's leading economic commentators how many people have been rescued from abject poverty by capitalism the average answer would...