A car driver has damaged bike racks installed outside a church in Oxford, just a week after they had been put in place, with the local councillor saying the racks’ placement made “no sense for any road users.”

The recently installed Sheffield bike racks in Old Headington were struck by an unknown driver, leaving one of the protective bollards damaged.

Labour city councillor Mary Clarkson criticised the scheme, arguing that it was poorly thought through. She wrote on NextDoor: “OCC removed a car space at a pinch point & installed bollards & bike racks. It’s lasted a week. There may not be an obvious alternative bike location here, but this makes no sense for any road users.”

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She added that similar proposals elsewhere had already raised concerns.

“Recently, the Marston Labour Team persuaded Oxfordshire County Council not to remove a parking space outside Cherwell Drive shops to create more bike spaces.

“Fearing damage to both cars and bikes, as well as the loss of a well-used parking space, we were unable to get agreement to have more spaces on the raised track between the service road and bike lane instead.”

Bike rack installation
Bike rack installation (Image Credit: Oxford Pedestrian Association)

However, other residents argued that it was driver behaviour that was the primary issue. On BlueSky, Peter Wells said: “If they can’t see a bollard or bikes far enough in advance to avoid it on a small slow road like that then they should probably hand their driving licence back.”

Sharon Curtis agreed, saying, “Absolutely. It’s an instance of people paying different amounts of attention to different hazards. Like the ‘sorry mate, didn’t see you’ that people on bikes often get.

“Though in this case, it’s the same positioning and amount of hazard, so they should be paying the same amount of attention!”

Report of damage to newly installed on-street bike parking in Old Headington….

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— Oxford Pedestrians Association (@oxfordpedestrians.bsky.social) 18 March 2026 at 13:07

Danny Yee also highlighted the necessity of the bike racks in the area, saying, “I’ve lost track of the number of times I would have stopped at those shops if there’d been free cycle parking but didn’t.

“Apparently, removing one of the two dozen car parking places in front of the shops will cripple the local businesses.”

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Yee also criticised the councillor’s comment, questioning why she opposed having cycle parking for the nearby pub.

In response, Cllr Clarkson said: “In Marston, Mark Lygo & I persuaded the County to place extra cycle racks on the raised section at Cherwell Drive rather than remove a parking space. Safer for cyclists and drivers. I’m a pragmatist. Don’t turn everything into a binary car/bike ideological battle. It rarely works.”

However, Yee noted that placing cycle racks on footways would inconvenience pedestrians and require cyclists to ride on pavements, adding that cycling groups Cyclox and OxPa favour carriageway-level parking.