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Birmingham scraps six cycle lanes in favour of two segregated superhighways

City centre to Selly Oak route will feature a stretch within the A38’s central reservation

Birmingham City Council has announced a change of tack for its Department for Transport-funded £60m Cycle Revolution project. Six cycle lane schemes have been scrapped in favour of two segregated superhighways.

Cabinet member for roads, Councillor Stewart Stacey (Lab Acocks Green) told the Birmingham Mail:

“This is a real change in direction. We had individuals and groups telling us we are not delivering the right infrastructure which makes people feel safe using it. And we will get better results by providing high-quality, high-capacity cycle routes.”

The two new routes are from Selly Oak to the city centre, via the A38, and Perry Barr to the city centre, via the A34. Both will be “largely segregated” and intended to deliver a comfortable cycling experience on some of the city’s major roads.

The combined cost will be almost £12.5m and construction is to begin next year with the lanes open in 2018.

David Cox, chairman of Cycling UK, said: "I welcome the proposals to build two, high-quality segregated cycle lanes linking Selly Oak and Perry Barr to Birmingham city centre.

"These safe and convenient routes will encourage more people to cycle as an attractive alternative to driving on congested roads or using crowded public transport. They will be a real advance for the city’s infrastructure and set standards for the West Midlands Cycle Charter."

Gavin Passmore, of Sustrans, said: "Evidence from our Bike Life report suggests that many people in Birmingham want to cycle more, with 77 per cent saying that protected bike lanes would help them cycle – more than for any other type of cycle route.

"The new routes will create a direct route to areas that are undergoing large investment and change, giving people a wider choice of how they travel."

Details of both routes are at this stage subject to consultation and detailed design work.

City Centre to Selly Oak

This will be a 4km two-way, fully segregated cycleway along the A38, linking Selly Oak and the University of Birmingham with the city centre.

One proposal is for the route to run down the central reservation for a stretch (Section B in the map below). Signal controlled crossings would bring cyclists to and from the side of the road at either end.

City Centre to Selly Oak cycle superhighway route (Birmingham Cycle Revolution).jpg

More details here.

City Centre to Perry Bar

This will be a 4.5km two-way, segregated cycleway along the A34, joining Perry Barr with the city centre and linking to Newtown Wellbeing Centre. A short section will be shared with pedestrians.

City Centre to Perry Bar cycle superhighway route (Birmingham Cycle Revolution).jpg

More details here.

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11 comments

Avatar
ianrobo | 7 years ago
0 likes

I am very excited by the Perry Barr to Brum one as I travel that road often andwill give feedback !! 

Would like to see more but here in Brum this is major step forward, however the City Centre itself is still a mess this is an example of a ride I have done.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6lCCIFfHB4

Avatar
TomJ | 7 years ago
0 likes

If it makes it easier to get across the ring road, without having either to take one's life in one's hands at a 3 lane roundabout or wait at a series of pelican crossings, it will be a Good Thing.

Avatar
P3t3 | 7 years ago
2 likes

Cycling down the central reservation with 2 lanes of traffic on each side sounds horrible from a pollution and noise stand point! But presumably better than cycling in the traffic.
Does offer the opportunity to build a genuinely fast commuter route though since nobody is going to be taking their kids/dogs on it. Get the junctions right and design for continuous 20-30kph without stopping and it might work.

Avatar
HarrogateSpa | 7 years ago
2 likes

Birmingham has some of the most appalling standard of crap 'cycle infrastructure' which barely merits the description. For example (I don't know for 100% sure it's still this way, but I imagine so) a pavement cycle lane on Harborne Park Road which has people walking in it, broken glass, and runs out near Battery Park with no suggestions as to what to do.

I've also seen some blue cycle signs on the A38 between Selly Oak and the city centre, which as far as I can tell are for a crap pavement cycle lane which is crossed by hundreds and driveways and side roads.

This sounds as though it will be a big improvement. There is lots of space in the middle of the A38. Ok, some leaves may fall on it. Ok, there is some pollution from traffic, but there's also an advantage to a main road route: people know it, and they can see it. Back roads routes don't have the same impact on public consciousness.

I believe we should criticise crap plans, but avoid the trap of being overly critical of imperfect but largely sensible ideas.

Avatar
RMurphy195 | 7 years ago
2 likes

These wide centralreservations go alomost the whole length of the Bristol Road, right out to the Lickey Hills, with a couple of setions e.g. Selly Oak, Northfield where there's no reservation. I think they used to be tram routes, I've often thoght they would make good locations for cycleways instead of the ones on the footpath or the segregated lane down from Northfield towards Selly Oak - which is normally ovscured by vehicles parked for the Wodlands hospital, and who spread mud all over the cycle lane as they drive off.

They'll need some sort of traffic control where there are gaps in the reservation but, for me, the sooner the better!

Avatar
brooksby | 7 years ago
1 like

That bloke at the front on the artists impression certainly gets around  

I'm sure he's been on artists impressions for the London superhighways, and he's been adopted on BikeSnobNYCs website too.

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pockstone | 7 years ago
2 likes

http://road.cc/content/news/213927-exercising-polluted-environments-can-...

4km up and 4km down the A34/A38 sounds like a breath of fresh air.

I can see the economy of using empty central reservations, but as with the Leeds Bradford supergutter, I cannot understand why more imaginative routes away from traffic aren't preferred to slavishly following the main roads.

Avatar
brooksby replied to pockstone | 7 years ago
1 like

pockstone wrote:

http://road.cc/content/news/213927-exercising-polluted-environments-can-...

4km up and 4km down the A34/A38 sounds like a breath of fresh air.

I can see the economy of using empty central reservations, but as with the Leeds Bradford supergutter, I cannot understand why more imaginative routes away from traffic aren't preferred to slavishly following the main roads.

I think they need cyclists down the middle of the main road to help soak up all the air pollution...

Avatar
ktache | 7 years ago
3 likes

I understand that the big central reservations used to be the old tram lines.  These roads are fast dual carriageways.  Good idea.  That's the easy bit, there are some big junctions on the selly oak road, I'm thinking of the ones in Edgebaston and getting those right will be the difficult bit.  I read a Birmingham bike blog a while back and the existing cycle routes that are on these roads are a bit of a joke.  

Avatar
CygnusX1 | 7 years ago
2 likes

Birmingham clearly has trees whose fallen leaves are magnetically repelled from tarmac

Avatar
burtthebike | 7 years ago
3 likes

They're going to have to make them seriously wider if the artist's impression is right.

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