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Would-be cyclists want more cycle lanes and better facilities, says Halfords survey

Retailer asks people what would get them to cycle more often

More dedicated cycle lanes to improve safety and better facilities such as showers at work and more cycle parking spaces are the leading factors that would get more people cycling in Great Britain according to a survey commissioned by the nation’s biggest bike retailer, Halfords.

The survey of 4,500 people found that 40 per cent of respondents said that a dedicated cycle lane on every road would persuade them to cycle more often.

In addition, 30 per cent said they would be influenced to do so if more cycle parking were available, 19 per cent cited better facilities such as showers at work, and 17 per cent were in favour of tax benefits for bike riders.

Among the top responses were: 

  • Dedicated cycling lanes on every road (40per cent)
  • More places to park and lock bicycles (30per cent)
  • Better facilities for cyclists at work (19per cent)
  • Tax benefits for cyclists (17per cent)
  • New York-style cycle ‘super highways’ (16 per cent)
  • Compulsory cycling proficiency for all cyclists (16 per cent)
  • Local cycle safety classes (15 per cent)
  • Driving licence style accreditation for cyclists (12 per cent)
  • Better cycle safety products (11 per cent)
  • Lowering speed limits for cars (10 per cent)

Halfords also questioned people about calls by certain cycling campaigners – which, exactly, wasn’t specified – for a 10 per cent increase in segregated cycle lanes by 2025.

Some 41 per cent of respondents said that such an increase would lead to less pollution, 38 per cent agreed it would bring commuting costs down, and 32 per cent believed it would lead to less congestion on the roads.

But 28 per cent thought that it would result in greater conflict between cyclists and other road users such as pedestrians and motorists.

Chris Boardman, who as policy advisor to British Cycling helped launch its 10-point Time To #ChooseCycling manifesto in February this year, said: “Health, congestion, pollution, more liveable cites – whatever topic you want to choose, the bicycle can be a large part of the answer.

“In fact it's the only form of mechanised transport that actually contributes to our society – the UK gains £590 a year for every extra regular cyclist," he added.

The fact that dedicated cycle lanes emerged as the top response is in line with other surveys we have covered here on road.cc, such as this one from the University of the West of England in April, which reveal the perception of danger from traffic to be the number one barrier to cycling.
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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56 comments

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bikebot | 9 years ago
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It isn't sharing the road with cars that puts potential cyclists off. It's sharing the roads with buses, lorries, tipper trucks and all the other massive vehicles that fill our cities.

With the exception of the construction industry, I often find those large vehicles have the most well trained drivers in London, but it's still intimidating and always potentially dangerous.

Most commuters are in congested towns and cities, the combination of high quality segregated infrastructure plus alternative routes using quietways is the right solution.

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joemmo replied to bikebot | 9 years ago
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bikebot wrote:

It isn't sharing the road with cars that puts potential cyclists off. It's sharing the roads with buses, lorries, tipper trucks and all the other massive vehicles that fill our cities.

Do you have any evidence of this? I'm pretty sure most people would find cars just as threatening. They certainly should be equally wary of them.

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bikebot replied to joemmo | 9 years ago
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joemmo wrote:
bikebot wrote:

It isn't sharing the road with cars that puts potential cyclists off. It's sharing the roads with buses, lorries, tipper trucks and all the other massive vehicles that fill our cities.

Do you have any evidence of this? I'm pretty sure most people would find cars just as threatening. They certainly should be equally wary of them.

Lots of empirical evidence from people I've worked with. I'm not suggesting people like cycling with cars, or that they wouldn't find them dangerous, but many people find the idea of sharing the roads with tipper trucks and other HGVs absolutely terrifying.

The news coverage in London, where they've been involved in the majority of fatal accidents even though they are only a small percentage of the traffic, suggests this fear is also partly justified as well as adding to it. Lot's of people were seeing pictures of crumpled bicycles lying under HGVs in the Metro and Evening Standard in that horrible few weeks last year. The HGV was very much cast as the problem, with proposals that they be banned from peak hour traffic.

Even that daft Top Gear episode caught onto the problem, with the pair of them petrified of the buses.

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Rich71 | 9 years ago
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The percentages quoted in this survey of people who agree with these initiatives is predictably woeful for a random cross section of the British public
just 40% to 10% are in favour,that equates to 60% to 90% who are against or just dont care,with these figures is anyone surprised the corrupt filth oil goons in Westminster prefer inaction apart from a few token splashes of paint here and there
I really dont believe i will ever see in my lifetime a substantial programme of safe properly segregated cycle lanes in this country,there are too many vested interests these crooks are protecting,same issue with the need for a massive affordable social housing programme
until we kick these scum out and begin to become a more compassionate civilised society then the deaths and regression into neanderthal hatred will only continue

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ribena | 9 years ago
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Theres about 5 people out of the 100 or so in my office in London cycling regularly to work. The rest won't because they absolutely do not want to cycle to work on congested city roads shared with cars, taxis, lorries and buses. (To be honest, I agree with them some days)

As long as the existing cyclists continue to shout "all we need is driver education", cycling will remain a minority activity, mostly aimed at enthusiasts rather than "ordinary people" that just want to get around.

Things are beginning to change with TFL too. I've emailed them about a horrendous junction on my commute, and early next year they are removing one of the two lanes of traffic, and replacing it with a dedicated cycle lane and separate cycle-only traffic lights.

This is good news.

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Beatnik69 replied to ribena | 9 years ago
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If only a significant number or all of the remaining 95 people would realise that if they were to cycle that would be a vast amount of motorised traffic off the roads. If this were to happen in every workplace just imagine how little traffic there would be.

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jacknorell replied to ribena | 9 years ago
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ribena wrote:

Things are beginning to change with TFL too. I've emailed them about a horrendous junction on my commute, and early next year they are removing one of the two lanes of traffic, and replacing it with a dedicated cycle lane and separate cycle-only traffic lights.

This is good news.

What junction is that?

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joemmo | 9 years ago
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A few people on here and plenty in government are still stuck in the mindset that cycle lane means painted gutter. Cycle lane should mean physically separated lane like they manage to provide in some countries on the continent.

I'm totally in agreement about preserving and improving the freedom to ride on the public road because you are clearly not going to get cycle lanes every where. However, in urban situations, if we really want proper, segregated lanes then some cyclists may have to adjust their mindset. This means accepting some compromise on their speed for the greater good of the majority who just want safe travel at their own pace.

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Chuck | 9 years ago
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It might sound pompous, but I'd expect that what most 'would-be cyclists' know about cycling in traffic is gained from driving past cyclists in their cars. Whereas a lot of 'currently-are' cyclists might think that bike lanes are not necessarily all that great, and have some idea of when they might not be any good at all.

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mad_scot_rider | 9 years ago
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Quote:

... better facilities ...

Quite rich considering every time circumstance has forced me inside my local Halfords in the last 5 yrs I have complained that they can't be taken seriously as a bike shop *with NO bike parking*

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dreamlx10 | 9 years ago
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Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

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parksey replied to dreamlx10 | 9 years ago
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dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

This.

I might be in a minority here, but it shouldn't be about having paint slapped on the road marking out some arbitrary cycle lane to encourage people onto bikes, it should be about improving driving standards such that "everyday" cyclists don't feel unsafe or intimidated on the roads.

If my experience is anything to go by, drivers tend to pass you more closely when you're in a 3ft wide cycle lane than they do if you were just cycling on the road anyway. I tend to stay out of these painted cycle lanes too as they just dump you by the kerb amongst all the drains and general road debris.

Besides, it shouldn't be about cyclists having to be confined only to travelling on marked cycle lanes. Ok, for utility cycling where there are obvious routes between popular destinations there is perhaps some sense in this, but when I'm out at the weekend I want to use the roads I want to use, and not feel threatened by drivers because there isn't a cycle lane on them.

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P3t3 replied to parksey | 9 years ago
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The "improve driver behavior" solution will never work in the long term though, for two main reasons:

1)People are fundamentally fallible, and when they are driving, prone to inattentiveness/stupidity/prioritising the wrong things and not least bullying weaker road users. When would the training to improve driving take place? Who would pay for it? How would we ensure that the next populist government didn't just do away with it.

2) Just because drivers are better trained doesn't mean that people will feel any safer riding close to cars and the results of the survey bear that our.

There is a sustainable long term solution but it involves a government with the vision to fundamentally change the way that our streets and towns work instead of pandering to a public that don't even have any idea how much better streets could work and a motoring/road haulage lobby group with its own agenda.

It certainly doesn't involve driver training, it involves making cycling feel subjectively safer. Until its properly demonstrated in a town in the UK we can expect more deaths due to pollution and obesity and a woeful cycling rate.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to P3t3 | 9 years ago
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P3t3 wrote:

The "improve driver behavior" solution will never work in the long term though, for two main reasons:

1)People are fundamentally fallible, and when they are driving, prone to inattentiveness/stupidity/prioritising the wrong things and not least bullying weaker road users. When would the training to improve driving take place? Who would pay for it? How would we ensure that the next populist government didn't just do away with it.

2) Just because drivers are better trained doesn't mean that people will feel any safer riding close to cars and the results of the survey bear that our.
.

I agree, but I'd say that the reason "improve driver behaviour" isn't going to work is that it would require a level of intense, constant, policing of the roads that is never going to be feasible in terms of cost.

"Training" won't do much unless its backed up with enforcement that means badly behaved drivers pay as high a cost for their errors as badly behaved cyclists do - but its not really practical to monitor roads that closely, that constantly.

The advantage of changing the physical reality is that once done it stays done, and makes following the rules the default option, and doesn't require paying large numbers of people to enforce those rules.

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GrahamSt replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 9 years ago
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FluffyKittenofTindalos wrote:

The advantage of changing the physical reality is that once done it stays done, and makes following the rules the default option, and doesn't require paying large numbers of people to enforce those rules.

Exactly. Paint a white line and put up a sign - nothing much will change.

But actually physically change things a bit, put in a proper kerb or a few bollards, and suddenly it's a much safer environment to cycle in.

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GrahamSt replied to parksey | 9 years ago
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dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

Good point - if having proper cycle lanes everywhere actually worked then places like the Netherlands would have loads of cyclists of all ages and abilities cycling everywhere!

Instead they can only dream of the incredible cycling utopia we have in the UK.

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Cranky Acid replied to parksey | 9 years ago
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parksey wrote:
dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

.. it should be about improving driving standards such that "everyday" cyclists don't feel unsafe or intimidated on the roads.

...I tend to stay out of these painted cycle lanes too as they just dump you by the kerb amongst all the drains and general road debris.

Besides, it shouldn't be about cyclists having to be confined only to travelling on marked cycle lanes. Ok, for utility cycling where there are obvious routes between popular destinations there is perhaps some sense in this, but when I'm out at the weekend I want to use the roads I want to use, and not feel threatened by drivers because there isn't a cycle lane on them.

What you describe is BAD cycle infrastructure and what you reveal is that you are thinking only of you, and similar enthusiasts, not of kids, older people and those generally put off and intimidated by the current conditions. They make the vast majority that would form a modal shift to true mass transport cycling. It's got zero to do with weekend leisure rides.

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HarrogateSpa replied to parksey | 9 years ago
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Quote:

I might be in a minority here, but it shouldn't be about having paint slapped on the road marking out some arbitrary cycle lane to encourage people onto bikes, it should be about improving driving standards such that "everyday" cyclists don't feel unsafe or intimidated on the roads.

If my experience is anything to go by, drivers tend to pass you more closely when you're in a 3ft wide cycle lane than they do if you were just cycling on the road anyway. I tend to stay out of these painted cycle lanes too as they just dump you by the kerb amongst all the drains and general road debris.

Besides, it shouldn't be about cyclists having to be confined only to travelling on marked cycle lanes. Ok, for utility cycling where there are obvious routes between popular destinations there is perhaps some sense in this, but when I'm out at the weekend I want to use the roads I want to use, and not feel threatened by drivers because there isn't a cycle lane on them.

Most of these points have already been answered above, but:

1. I agree with you about bad cycle lanes, with just paint. Drivers do tend to pass you more closely. But it isn't bad cycle lanes we want.

2. My view is that training drivers will never work. It seems to be human nature that people give you lots of space if it's easy to do so, but if it isn't, impatience takes priority over considerate driving. You have to force them to allow space with the road infrastructure.

British Cycling found that 60+% of people are put off by having to share roads with traffic, so it has to change.

3. Weekend cycling on country lanes is a bit different to utility cycling in busy towns and cities.

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bambergbike replied to HarrogateSpa | 9 years ago
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HarrogateSpa wrote:

My view is that training drivers will never work. It seems to be human nature that people give you lots of space if it's easy to do so, but if it isn't, impatience takes priority over considerate driving. You have to force them to allow space with the road infrastructure.

I live in Germany - have done for years - and I cycle a fair bit and the vast majority of drivers do give me lots of space when overtaking. And wait behind me until it's safe to overtake. And slow down in fog, rain, and snowstorms. It's not all due to the enforcement regime, which isn't actually very strict at all, but the wider culture (all sorts of things - the driver training regimen, strict liability, the obligations drivers have towards cyclists and pedestrians, the fact that drivers are used to being confronted with unaccompanied children who don't yet have perfect road sense because it's still culturally acceptable to say "go out and play with the traffic, dearest.")

I had a close pass at the weekend - a tractor/high-sided trailer who gave me maybe 40 cm clearance - and I was shocked and appalled by it as I can often go for many months without one. When the driver swung off and parked just ahead of me I pulled in to get the number plate and have a chat with him about his driving. (The second time I've done that in the last five years.) It had been pretty bad driving, but also had some redeeming points: I believed the driver when he said he had been keeping an extremely close eye on me in his mirrors and had squeezed past me very, very slowly and carefully. (The overtake lasted a very, very long time. He was limited to 25 km/h, and I was riding uphill with heavy panniers; the whole thing was in slow motion and I probably wasn't really in mortal danger as I would have had time to bail into the ditch if he had come any closer.)

He absolutely shouldn't have overtaken me before the estate car had finished overtaking him; it would have cost him three seconds to wait rather than having the three of us side-by-side. But it was thoughtless rather than deliberately aggressive or anti-cyclist. The road is quiet but traffic had bunched up a bit behind his slow vehicle and put him pressure - the car had been waiting for a straight stretch of road to overtake, there was a bus behind waiting to overtake, he had been aware of them before he came round the bend, saw me and didn't process the situation fast enough. He was shocked to be thought of as an inconsiderate or incompetent driver. He stressed that he had never had an accident and (having helped out at accidents as a volunteer with the fire brigade) never wanted to, either. His tone was quite concilatory - he initially didn't understand my problem ("But nothing happened!") but he took my point on board that days with near-death experiences feel a bit different from days without near-death experiences and that I would like to feel safe on his local road. And he didn't ask why I had been on "his" road and not using the parallel greenway. (I had my reasons.)

I've reported him, but I suspect that my worst problems might be nice enough problems to have in an international comparison. I was angry because I'm used to drivers on rural roads giving me acres of space (not a poxy 1.5 metres, more like three to five - it shocks me to the core to see people asking for 1.5 metres without also stressing that such a small gap is only acceptable at low speeds). I don't mind urban car drivers (small vehicles, not high-sided vans or trucks) going down to around 1 m if they really slow to the point where the speed differential between us is barely more than walking pace before overtaking. I'd want - and generally get - more space if I had a child with me.

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rockdemon replied to parksey | 9 years ago
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You're right, and my guess is that you're speaking from experience, rather than the respondent's of this survey who are probably hypothesizing....

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joemmo replied to dreamlx10 | 9 years ago
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dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

unless you're in the majority who clearly find sharing roads with motor traffic unpleasant, intimidating and downright dangerous.

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dreamlx10 replied to joemmo | 9 years ago
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joemmo wrote:
dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

unless you're in the majority who clearly find sharing roads with motor traffic unpleasant, intimidating and downright dangerous.

It won't get any better if we all cycle separately from traffic, more cyclists on the roads equals more awareness among other road users. The roads were not built for cars, they were built to get about the country more easily, by foot, horseback, bike, or car.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to dreamlx10 | 9 years ago
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dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

If only some idiot hadn't let cars onto them!

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Cranky Acid replied to dreamlx10 | 9 years ago
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dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

I must remember to shout that very loud in the faces of my wife and kids, ignore their tears and make them join me for happy family rides through Manchester sometime.

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dreamlx10 replied to Cranky Acid | 9 years ago
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Cranky Acid wrote:
dreamlx10 wrote:

Cycle lanes are everywhere, they're called roads.

I must remember to shout that very loud in the faces of my wife and kids, ignore their tears and make them join me for happy family rides through Manchester sometime.

Not cycling on the roads won't make them any safer, less cars on the roads and more cyclists is the answer.

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Some Fella | 9 years ago
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And in other news - bears found to be defecating in woods!

Why is it the world and his wife realise the benefits of good cycling infrastructure except, it seems, the people who make the decisions about such things?

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