- In 2000 the proportion of cars to bicycles entering central London in the morning peak was 11:1; in 2014 it was 2:1. If the trend continues cycles entering London in the morning will outnumber cars by 2019
- In Zone 1 in the morning rush hour 32 per cent of all vehicles on the roads are bicycles; on some roads it’s 70 per cent
- In 2015/16 London has spent roughly £18 per head on cycling – on a par with Germany and the Netherlands
- The proportion of black and ethnic minority Londoners who cycle frequently (three days a week or more) is now the same as the proportion of white Londoners who do
- While numbers of women cycling has increased the proportion of women cycling remains flat
- Cycling rose 63 per cent on Transport for London controlled roads over six years of Boris Johnson’s term, while in 2014 cycling growth was at a “near record” 10.3 per cent
- Cycle casualty rates (KSIs) are the lowest ever recorded, while cycling deaths in 2015 (9) were the second lowest on record, and the lowest per journey on record
- Report recommends the cycling budget should be increased by the next mayor and that Transport for London should oversee the next phase of the Quietways programme following a failure to deliver significant improvements on borough routes
- Report recommends increasing London’s Congestion Charge or targeting particular routes at busy times to discourage driving and reduce motor traffic
In three years there could be more people cycling into central London in the mornings than driving, according to a document released by Transport for London today.
The legacy document, titled Human Streets, and produced by London’s Cycling Commissioner, Andrew Gilligan, describes the progress of Boris Johnson’s cycling vision, launched three years ago, and says the next mayor should keep investing in cycling to keep London moving.
Boris Johnson says that though the cycling programme was one of the most difficult things he has done, his single biggest regret as mayor was he didn’t do it sooner.
Next mayor must triple bike infrastructure, say campaigners
Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, MP, says in the document: “Exactly three years ago, I unveiled my vision to make cycling in London safer, more popular and more normal. My single biggest regret as Mayor is that I did not do it sooner.
“Road space is hotly contested. According to a former Chancellor of the Exchequer, installing a cycle lane on the Victoria Embankment was ‘doing more damage to London than almost anything since the Blitz’. Many of my colleagues in Parliament share this view. The Superhighways have probably been one of the most difficult things we have had to do.”
In 2013 Johnson launched his cycling vision, in which he pledged to build new Cycle Superhighways and upgrade existing routes to continental standards, as well as investing £90m on three “Mini Holland” schemes in outer London which, he says, “are starting to reshape car-dominated town centres into places that work for the majority who do not drive”.
He says cities compete on quality of life and London can’t afford to stand still.
Perhaps starkest in the report, published by the Greater London Authority, is the change in the way people get to work across London. In 2000 there were 11 cars for every bike, in 2014 it was two cars to every bike. In three years, if trends continue, it says, there will be more people cycling than driving into central London.
As well as spelling out the cycling programme’s successes, the report highlights where things went wrong – notably with the Quietways, supposed back street routes on borough roads, where work has been slow and failed to significantly improve road conditions.
"Failure of ambition" on London Quietways
It suggests the next mayor brings the Quietways programme into Transport for London, because too many stakeholders has complicated the issue and contributed to the programme’s failure. It adds if a route fails to come up to standards money should be withdrawn from the scheme and spent on fewer, higher quality schemes, instead.
It says more Superhighways are the way to ensure capacity meets cycling demand on London’s roads and sets out where routes are needed, including an extension of one Cycle Superhighway to Heathrow airport, one linking London Bridge with Liverpool St and another along Old Street, where almost 70 per cent of Westbound vehicles in the morning are cycles.
Overall, political leadership is needed from the next mayor, it says, including to tackle and reduce private car use in the city. Though there are signs Mayoral candidates are spooked by “bikelash”, evidence from other cities shows it won’t last. It says: “For years in this country, we did half-hearted cycling schemes that upset nobody but also, bluntly, helped nobody and changed nothing.”
The sheer numbers cycling in London has radically changed that, it says.
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6 comments
Sian then Caroline then Sadiq then...
well Zac hasn't even the right noises, but has instread offered sympathy to the noise and idiocy of Conti's clowns in NW3.
Wow, £18 per head on cycling. Never ever thought I'd say this, but re cycling, well done, Boris. Hopefully the legacy will go on and on.
It's a pity that our politicians don't have the vision or will power to roll this initiative out nationwide. Where I live the road surfaces are so atrocious that you feel your eyes are getting bounced out of your head. Some of the potholes are so deep that, unseen in the dark, they are potential death traps for cyclists.
It should be compulsory that every councillor has to cycle round his constituency during the hours of darkness. I think we'd see a massive improvement in our roads then.
Do report them when you can: www.filltahthole.org.uk
I really hope whoever is elected next carries on the good work but sadly on a first showing, it doesn't look good. London needs more of the infrastructure that has gone in recently and it is highly doubtful that current two leading candidates have either the spine or drive to get it done.
At best it looks like we are going to need them to go through the learning process all over again. I don't believe Boris really has any passion to increase cycling because he likes it. He has been driven to it by facts about air pollution, transport infrastructure capacity and a bike boom.
If he says he wishes he had done it years earlier then the next candidate really should listen because Boris is a converted sceptic.
Second preference matters a lot in electing the Mayor, it's never been won on first preference. Lots of room for a policy nudge in the next few weeks, time to make some noise. It's even possible Zac might wake up and realise he's been taking advice from twonks.