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Plans for “greener, safer” Regent Street criticised for unprotected cycle lanes; Sign promotes ‘joy’ of cycling on 60 limit A-road; Rapha/Palace jerseys now £600 on eBay; New three-tier coronavirus restrictions for England + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

How cycling has boomed across the world during the pandemic
Has your area seen more cyclists during the pandemic?
📕 Read more: https://t.co/VxAcCutlZg pic.twitter.com/u1wZPkP8J9
— World Economic Forum (@wef) October 11, 2020
The World Economic Forum have put together some stats on the increases in cycling since the outbreak of COVID-19, with Europe described as a “cycle superpower”. Finland is leading the two-wheeled race by spending €7.76 per person on cycling infrastructure; while the UK is fourth in the European table with a spend of €4.80 per person.
Outside of Europe, the US has seen a 121% increase in bike sales, while the the Colombian capital Bogota now has 80km of new cycle lanes.
Plans for "greener, safer" Regent Street slammed for lack of protected cycling infrastructure
We are working alongside @CityWestminster to transform London’s iconic Regent Street – helping to deliver our shared vision for a greener, safer and more accessible West End.
Read in full: https://t.co/7O860nelRP#accessibility #airquality #sustainability pic.twitter.com/2ffTNdsZoX
— The Crown Estate (@TheCrownEstate) October 12, 2020
Although Crown Estate say the provisions will include “wider pavements, reduced traffic, improved provision for cyclists” and “sustainable tree planting and greenery”, some think the developers and Westminster Council are way wide of the mark with their ideas.
Just going on pic, looks like cycle lanes go straight into bus cage. That’s against LTN 1/20 guidance, #GearChange etc. as is lack of physically protected space for cycling. IMO stepped cycle tracks likely best here w bus stop bypasses. On bays, is most delivery rear access?…
— Simon Munk (@psimonk) October 12, 2020
Must try harder. Segregated bike lanes and buses only. The planner was drunk I guess
— Bob From Accounts (@BobFromAccounts) October 12, 2020
Simon Monk of London Cycling Campaign says the plans may contravene the government’s guidance in their Gear Change document, as the cycle lane appears to head straight into a bus stop. There also appears to be no physical separation between the main carriageway and the cycle lanes, with just narrow strips of paint marking out the lanes on each side of the road.
The Crown Estate claim the new ‘interim designs’ are part of a number of initiatives in their portfolio that support sustainable travel – most notably BIKE-DROP, a pop-up secure bike parking service.
Brompton add two new colourways to 2020 range


Britain’s largest bicycle manufacturer has unveiled its flagship Electric folder in a new Turkish Green colour for 2021: “the dreamy transcendence between blue and green is inspired by city night life”, so they say.


There’s also a new Cloud Blue colour dropping into the Core range, which will “match the sunniest days in the saddle” according to Brompton. Both are available to order now on Brompton’s website, at selected online retailers and in Brompton Junction stores.
New three-tier coronavirus restrictions for England to be announced shortly


Will any of the changes affect your cycling plans where you live? Boris Johnson is making a statement now…
New coronavirus restrictions for England: 'Very high' alert level means no social mixing outdoors
If you live in the Liverpool City Region, social mixing outdoors is now off as the area is in the ‘Very high’ tier, which will prevent all mixing between households both indoors and outdoors. In areas where the alert level is ‘High’ (including Nottinghamshire and Greater Manchester) the rule of six still applies outdoors, so bike rides with six or less participants are still on.
12 October 2020, 08:50
12 October 2020, 08:50
12 October 2020, 08:50
Yesterday's emotional TV interview would be no way to end Cav's glittering career, says his former teammate
Wiggins: Cavendish “deserves a far better send-off” from cycling
2012 Tour de France winner calls on Sir Dave Brailsford to sign sprinter for swansong season
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Latest Comments
Bi-directional cycle paths are very dangerous and councils should use extreme caution when deciding to install them. The problem is the complexity they provide motorists who have to cross them. There was a study made in Berlin that shows you are 12 times more likely to be killed at a crossing on a bi-directional cycle path than if you cycled on the road. https://www.bikexprt.com/bikepol/facil/sidepath/adfc173.htm
That - if it is like the photo - seems to be an inadequate and very poor entrance design. Where are the physical features to enforce behaviour? There will be a queue of cars sitting on the mobility track. The LHA could have CPOd a small slice of land to make it adequate and given a one or two car standing area by the carriageway with a bent-in mobility track. I'd say the designers have looked the other way.
I’m not sure this is a problem really. How often does the car boot sale take place?once a week at most, and not every week either? And not all day. I’m sure all users can manage and it would mean everyone taking car at the entrance / exit.
Many years since lived in Cheltenham but if the coach park is where I think it is there is another car park on the opposite side of Evesham rd also part of the race course and has an entrance off the main road and off a side road unlike the coach park it has no hard standing though ...
Ernest Hemingway was once sent off by his wife to buy a suit bag from a New York department store for an upcoming trip to Europe: the sales assistant showed him a top quality bag which, he assured him, could easily accommodate half a dozen suits. Hemingway explained, "Can afford bag. Can afford six suits. Can't afford both." I think this extraordinarily priced item would create the same problem, can afford through axle, or can afford a stand to attach to it, but...
Funny how opinions can differ. As a lifelong cyclist in The Netherlands (basically anything, from errands to daily commutes to cargo to mtb/gravel to bike messaging and bike packing) for over 4 decades, I've never missed a kickstand. There's just always something to lean my bike against, and apparently I am just very skilled at doing so, as my bike never tips over (pro tip: keep it almost vertical, and lean it with the rear *tire* against the pole/wall/tree etc.). Being a bike mechanic in my country means I deal with bikes with kickstands all the time, and I hate them. There's just about always something going on with them. They rattle, they have play because the bolts come loose, they creak, the black paint flakes off, the end cap gets lost, they are unstable. And of course, they are heavy, and ugly. And often quite expensive to boot.
I work at Decathlon as a bike mechanic in their Dutch service center, and products like this menstrual cycle bib shorts make me proud to work for them.
What an absolute dipshit that man is.
Feels like you're greeting an old friend there... Pretty sure that people driving motor vehicles often think that most others are "in the way" and that is generally the case for *different* transport modes "sharing space". No need to believe that infra will usher that in *! Indeed Calton Reid's work on the 1930s UK cycle path project (see britishcycletracks dot com) documents that the suspicions of cycle groups of the time eg. the Cycle Touring Club were correct - the planners *did* want cyclists off the roads! Of course the failure was not in providing cyclists with an alternative and trying to move them there but in letting the drivers of motor vehicles take the roads and streets over. Between heavy promotion / accommodation for drivers and the resulting unpleasant and dangerous conditions that resulted from so many humans driving, most people ditched the bike. Interesting to see where vehicular cycling folks fall: are they absolutist ("my right to ride on motorways")? Do they believe in "accidents" (or maybe the cyclists who die weren't ... skillful enough)? What do they think of all the others not riding - do they (apparently) not care ("I'm alright Jack"), do they think they're just weak / lazy, is it due to "dangerisation of a perfectly safe activity" (and if so why do many of them think that tiny active travel organisations manage to achieve this propaganda feat) etc.? * Aside what must be billions spent over the years on pro-driving lobbying, advertising etc. there's all that ancient human psychological kit of "us and them" and "detecting cheaters". Plus the fact that while cycling may have partly replaced horse riding the car has taken on its prestige / rank-marking function.
@ianking Riding back from a trip to Spain through France, it was noticeable that the amount of bad driving near us cyclists increased the farther north we got, and the cars had Brit plates.
10 thoughts on “Plans for “greener, safer” Regent Street criticised for unprotected cycle lanes; Sign promotes ‘joy’ of cycling on 60 limit A-road; Rapha/Palace jerseys now £600 on eBay; New three-tier coronavirus restrictions for England + more on the live blog”
I’d buy Canyon Vans right now
I’d buy Canyon Vans right now
Not wanting the Quickstep
Not wanting the Quickstep with extra Lidl logos? Either the designer strayed from hip / street / luxury or there’s something I’ve missed out on by being an Aldi customer.
All my cycling socks come
All my cycling socks come from Aldi. They are utterly brilliant, including the Merino ones.
Oh, I’m a big fan of the
Oh, I’m a big fan of the merino socks – warm, comfy, durable, stink resistant, and I have a merino base layer from Aldi as well. Then there’s the protein granola for pre ride breakfast and lovely pressed fruit bars in the back pockets… Lidl, can you compete?
All the welding rods you’ll ever need in the middle aisle too (who buys them?).
Quite like the MScott
Quite like the MScott/OffWhite and the Jumbo/Versace. These kind of rethinking football kits was all over twitter a few years ago and those designs are now coming into the current crop of shirts. So don’t be surprised if a few experiments do bleed through to the peloton.
fair enough the bib shorts
fair enough the bib shorts were probably priced at £195 as the pro version to begin with, and we can debate whether they are worth it another day, but youd have to be a some kind of obsessive cycling geek to even recognise these were part of this special edition kit, they are just black with a few standard sponsor logos and pay the extra for them.
That is alot of gaffer tape
That is alot of gaffer tape on the handlebars Dave? Did you try a homemade version of the new Canyon cockpit and it is holding them together?
There is not 100 comments in
There is not 100 comments in the live blog, has the other one gone too?
If so I will I will be true to my word and subscribe tomorrow.
Done!
Done!
Lol at the A367 sign. When I
Lol at the A367 sign. When I did uni club rides along there heading into Bath, it was the place we had the most problems and agression. Terrifying for anyone not in a car