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Plans approved to "make cycling normal" in Swindon

Council will target £500,000 funding after plans, drawn up by cyclists and the council, for a bike network to double cycling by 2026, were approved

Plans to create a cycle network in Swindon were approved this week by the council, in a bid to help make cycling a “normal, everyday activity” in the town, and double cycling trips by 2026.

Under the Swindon Cycling Framework the council will bid for £500,000 of government funding to improve and link the town’s cycle routes, targeting a raft of different government funding pots.

The Framework plans to bring together health, transport and sport sectors to increase cycling in the town, with the aim of reducing traffic congestion and improving health.

Councils will be "scrabbling for scraps" on cycle funding

Councillor Dale Heenan, the cabinet member for transport, said: “The Cycling strategy has been created by cyclists for cyclists and it has my full support”.

“One in seven children cycle to school in Swindon, yet only one in 20 adults cycle to work. I want to see this figure increase significantly because it will not only promote active, healthy lifestyles, but it will also help reduce congestion on our roads.

“There is a lot of focus on improving our roads for car drivers in Swindon at the moment, but we must also improve and create a safe and convenient cycle network.

"The more people we can encourage to cycle the less traffic will be on the roads."

Local cycle campaigners the Swindon Bicycle User Group (BUG), alongside Swindon Borough Council, Sustrans, British Cycling and local cycling clubs, have developed the plans over the past year.

The Framework document says with government funding set to decrease in the short-term other funding sources will need to be found. It recognises cycle routes on the highway will need to be prioritised, and says "that will include measures other than just tarmac and paint”.

Work to cycle route the “Southern Flyer”, linking West Leaze in Wichelstowe with the town centre, began in January and will open in summer, while the Western Flyer, a two mile off road route connecting Westlea to the town centre, was upgraded in 2014.

In 2011 Swindon received £4m from the Local Sustainable Transport Fund, which paid for a bike loan scheme and “the rounds”, a series of seven mile off-road routes, devised by BUG. The Council claims its cycling to work figures are approximately double the national average.

The BUG’s Claire Fleming, who is also a travel plan officer for the council, says the campaign’s good relationship with the council and cycle-friendly councillors, including Cllr Keith Williams, have helped champion cycling politically in the town.

Laura Laker is a freelance journalist with more than a decade’s experience covering cycling, walking and wheeling (and other means of transport). Beginning her career with road.cc, Laura has also written for national and specialist titles of all stripes. One part of the popular Streets Ahead podcast, she sometimes appears as a talking head on TV and radio, and in real life at conferences and festivals. She is also the author of Potholes and Pavements: a Bumpy Ride on Britain’s National Cycle Network.

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8 comments

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M444TTB | 8 years ago
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I've finally seen some evidence of work on 'my' section of the route. Five of so sets of slabs with a lovely picture of a cyclist on, some nice looking wooden posts  and a big 'Southern flyer' sign. The route already had smaller blue cycle path signs. Waste of money if you ask me.

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severs1966 | 8 years ago
1 like

I see the process is continuing whereby the ignorant who hold power conflate sport with utility cycling.

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fukawitribe replied to severs1966 | 8 years ago
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severs1966 wrote:

I see the process is continuing whereby the ignorant who hold power conflate sport with utility cycling.

Was this post meant to be for this article ?

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M444TTB | 8 years ago
0 likes

I'm very sceptical about what will actually be achieved. The Western Flyer isn't anything to write home about. It chucks you out onto a road with a very poor surface toward the centre or an unlit rough track to north Swindon (my route home).

As with most places the infrastructure sees cycling as secondary. When you're getting cold and wet some traffic lights that actually do something for you (rather than just light up a 'waiting' sign then change with the traffic as usual) and some cycle lanes that don't add a mile to your journey by taking you out of the way are a minimum if you want to get people out of their cars.

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vonhelmet | 8 years ago
3 likes

£500k won't buy the biscuits for the meetings.

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Al__S | 8 years ago
4 likes

£500k will get bascially nothing when it comes to "proper infrastructure"

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brooksby replied to Al__S | 8 years ago
0 likes

Al__S wrote:

£500k will get bascially nothing when it comes to "proper infrastructure"

Oh, but you can buy a lot of paint...

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DaveE128 | 8 years ago
2 likes

What?? Cycle infrastructure designed by cyclists, in the UK?! I'm really pleasantly surprised!  4 Thumbs up to Swindon for doing the obvious thing that no-one else seems to be.

Hope that it doesnt get tuned into the usual rubbish during the approvals process...

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