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Viral video déjà vu as taxi driver doesn't wait for child cycling near school; Your N+1 tales — is there one bike to do it all?; Tadej Pogačar — the off-season rapper; How to carry pizza by bike + more on the live blog

Happy Friday! It's a chilly December morning so stay inside by the live blog fire... Dan Alexander is chopping up wood as we speak.....
02 December 2022, 11:37
Viral video déjà vu as taxi driver doesn't wait for child cycling near school

We've been here before...

Viral video debated on Jeremy Vine show (screenshot Twitter video/ @azb2019)

> Viral video of driver refusing to stop for five-year-old cyclist debated on Jeremy Vine's Channel 5 show

Different father, different child, different driver, different road, but strikingly similar footage...

One difference, as heard in the video, is that this road is — our Google Maps digging suggests, Leahurst Road in Lewisham — a school street which should not be accessed by motorists without a permit during school drop-off and pick-up times.

The idea being that banning drivers reduces pollution, encourages active travel and makes the school gates and surrounding area a generally more pleasant and less dangerous place.

As per Lewisham Council this site is ANPR camera enforced, so this cabbie may well have just landed a ticket for their troubles, and should not be driven along (without a permit) between the hours of 8.15-9.15am and 2.45-3.45pm.

And while "residents who live within the zone, emergency services, buses and those who have been granted an exemption permit are permitted to enter"... Lewisham Council says nothing about private hire vehicles...unless the passenger "holds a Blue Badge as either a parent/carer or your child holds a Blue Badge and attends the school" or it is a Special Educational Needs (SEN) Transport vehicle. 

If your déjà vu's yet to lift and your brain remains fogged you might remember this same site from ANOTHER recent live blog video...

Driver mounts pavement and chastises child for riding on same footpath (Greg N, Twitter)

> Driver – in untaxed car with expired MOT – mounts pavement on wrong side of the road… then chastises six-year-old for cycling on same footpath

I need a lie down after all of that.

02 December 2022, 17:26
Blast from the past...

With this vid doing the rounds on social media again it's probably worth linking you the full thing courtesy of... the June 2021 live blog... you're welcome!

02 December 2022, 16:41
Herne Hill Velodrome receives $200,000 from Rapha Foundation
Herne Hill Velodrome (Rapha press release)

Herne Hill Velodrome in south London will receive a $200,000 grant from the Rapha Foundation to increase the availbaility of its off-road facilities, including the employment of an off-road development officer.

Tim McInnes, chair of Herne Hill Velodrome Trust said: "Herne Hill Velodrome is delighted to receive this grant from the Rapha Foundation. It complements the Foundation's first award made to us in 2019, and it will allow us to extend our cycling development activity in exciting ways including into off-road riding for the first time."

The Rapha Foundation, founded in 2019, funds more than 20 organisations around the world committed to inspiring the next generation of riders and racers from under-represented communities, and invests $1.5 million per year in grassroots activities.

02 December 2022, 16:18
Comment of the day
Comment of the day live blog

 

02 December 2022, 15:23
If the World Cup was pro cycling: Poland vs France & USA vs Netherlands

Forgive me for failing to find any Procyclingstats evidence of a Uruguayan pro battling a Ghanaian up an epic climb, a Portuguese TT specialist cutting through the wind faster than a South Korean, a Brazilian sprinter pipping a Cameroonian rival or a Serbian domestique leading out his Swiss teammate...

With tomorrow marking the start of the knockout stage, however, we have fresh ammunition for the weekend ahead: USA vs Netherlands and Poland vs France — and boy do we have some classics...

In fact quite a few of Michał Kwiatkowski's biggest wins have come at the expense of the French... this year's Amstel Gold...

World Cup pro cycling (procyclingstats)

San Sebastián in 2017...

World Cup pro cycling (procyclingstats)

And as for United States against the Netherlands? It could only be Sepp Kuss and his band of Dutch friends...

World Cup pro cycling (procyclingstats)

But what's that? Even better... a last-minute entrant... the women's elite TT at the Yorkshire worlds...

World Cup pro cycling (procyclingstats)

You heard it here first: 2-2 AET. Penalties to follow...

02 December 2022, 14:43
Nice Nice
02 December 2022, 14:21
"She is one incredible human being": Laura Kenny hails fellow track star Katie Archibald
Laura Kenny and Katie Archibald win Madison gold in Tokyo (Copyright Alex Broadway, SWpix.com).JPG

Laura Kenny has given a glowing tribute to Katie Archibald, saying it is "incredible" how her fellow track star has maintained sporting success despite personal grief. Speaking to the BBC ahead of this weekend's UCI Track Champions League in London, Kenny said Archibald is "one incredible human being".

Back in August Archibald revealed she had attempted to save her partner Rab Wardell's life after the Scottish mountain biker suffered a cardiac arrest. Since then she was part of the Great Britain squad that won World Championship team pursuit silver and has achieved success in the Champions League, sitting one point behind American Jennifer Valente in the women's endurance standings.

> "It's quite painful to say": Katie Archibald thanks fans for support since death of partner Rab Wardell

"If I lost Jase [husband Sir Jason Kenny] or my somebody, I don't know how I would carry on," Kenny said. "I know she says cycling is her carrying on, but if that happened to me I don't know how I would get a leg over a bike, let alone be able to perform at the level she's performing at.

"It's like when I said that bike racing is a happy space, but still, to be able to commit to it, to train that hard and put yourself through that much pain to be going so well, I think she is phenomenal, I really do. I don't think I could do that after everything she's gone through."

02 December 2022, 13:27
The best turbo trainers for 2023

02 December 2022, 12:17
road.cc is now on Mastodon!

Give us a follow! @roadcc [at] masto.ai

02 December 2022, 10:35
If British Cycling designed cycle lanes...

 

02 December 2022, 08:59
Your N+1 tales — is there one bike to do it all?

Yesterday, tech editor Mat took a look at Ridley's new Grifn all-road bike — that's a fast, comfortable road bike with 38mm tyre clearance for off-roading — and asked if it could put an end to N+1?

2023 Ridley Grifn Shimano GRX - 1 (1)

> Does Ridley’s new Grifn all-road bike really put an end to N+1?

So, here's what you said... 

Miller: "This looks great. At the start of the year I built a bike of similar concept for myself and I've loved riding it.

Reader bike (Miller)

"It has 40mm tyre clearance so I've been able to swap in knobbly tyres for gravel events although I've mainly run 34mm Pro One road rubber. I think the one bike concept is valid especially with a second pair of wheels. That said... I have more than one bike. Well why wouldn't you?!" 

kil0ran: "Nope, the Domane did that a couple of years ago. And it's more versatile than this in terms of tyre clearance."

IanMSpencer: "The trouble is you end up with N+2 wheels as you want different tyres on different days."

OnYerBike: "If it puts an end to N+1, why are Ridley still selling no fewer than 15 other models?" 

Remember, it only puts an end to N+1 if you want it to...

02 December 2022, 10:01
What internal downtube storage was designed for...
02 December 2022, 09:38
Tadej Pogačar — the off-season rapper

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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42 comments

Avatar
Rome73 | 2 years ago
1 like

the taxi driver in the school street - pretty normal driving for a cab driver. Strange that the dad told the child to 'let the cars go' when the cyclists had priority. Inexperienced cyclists - and children fall into this category - often stop and give priority to other road users, especially cars -  when they don't have to. It's important to teach them priority. Obviously safely.
Observation, communication, priority, position. 

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IanMSpencer replied to Rome73 | 2 years ago
1 like

I puzzled at that but I think it was because there was a queue ahead and he correctly didn't queue across the junction. And with a small child, best to get the enemy where you can see them  3

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ktache | 2 years ago
1 like

With thanks to singletrack.

Unfortunately all sold out. Who'd have thought ti top caps could be so popular.

https://bentleycomponents.co.uk/fck-the/p/the-original-yorkshire-rose-to...

 

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Backladder | 2 years ago
2 likes

Quote:

Tim McInnes, chair of Herne Hill Velodrome Trust said: "Herne Hill Velodrome is delighted to receive this grant from the Rapha Foundation. It complements the Foundation's first award made to us in 2019, and it will allow us to extend our cycling development activity in exciting ways including into off-road riding for the first time."

Surely riding on the velodrome is already off-road!

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Furness | 2 years ago
0 likes

Lots of complaints locally about cycle lane blocking ambulance with zero acknowledgement of fact it was attending a incident where a driver hit a pedestrian, or the role of traffic in delays https://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/23132428.concern-cycle-lanes-blocked-ambu...

Now lane is to be 'improved' by reinstating two lane traffic and pushing bikes on to shared used pavement
https://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/23151226.barrow-roads-see-new-cycle-lane-...

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Moist von Lipwig | 2 years ago
14 likes

Saw this on Cycling UK.  I've never seen the simple equivalence of safe distance made before. Pretty clear message.

 

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Steve K replied to Moist von Lipwig | 2 years ago
7 likes

Dave Walker's cartoons are generally excellent for making points about cycling very clearly and simply.

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Rome73 replied to Moist von Lipwig | 2 years ago
0 likes

That is very good. 

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AidanR | 2 years ago
0 likes

Re: the taxi driver footage, a quick correction. The video starts on Leahurst Road, which is indeed a school street, but the incident itself takes place on Eastdown Park, which is not.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to AidanR | 2 years ago
2 likes

I think the tweet is to highlight two seperate wrongs, continuing oncoming when could have stopped for a second, and then carrying on forward afterwards onto a school street. I'm not sure he is stating the area it happened was a school street as he does follow it up with an additional tweet with the signage which shows where it starts.  

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Awavey replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
0 likes

But when the original example was shared, werent we all of the opinion this is a pretty much daily occurrence for any cyclist on the road?

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AidanR replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
2 likes

But we don't know that the cabbie carries on onto the school street, and Greg couldn't have known when he shouted "it's a school street" whether the cabbie was going to carry on into Leahurst Road. Most cars turn right onto Dermody Road when the school street is in operation, unsurprisingly. Please note that I am not speculating - I cycle these streets every day.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to AidanR | 2 years ago
0 likes

For you latter query, he might not have done although he wasn't indicating to state he was turning either. Although all turning up Dermody does is bring you to a dead end unless they have removed the apparent LTN at the top of it. (Shown on street view Sept22 with signs and marking on road stil. Doesn't stop the streetview car of course). 

It does seem that when the school street is active, for an hour the other end of the road is cut off. I'm guessing that is why the two cars suddenly plonked themselves at that area making it more of an hurdle then 5 seconds before. They couldn't work out how to legally get passed the area. 

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AidanR replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
0 likes

Going up Dermody is not a dead end, as you can turn off just before the camera-controlled barrier, although it will take you in a big loop as they reversed the one way system on Pascoe Road. It's not the greatest TBH, as during operation the school street cuts off access to the Lee Green LTN from the north. And I say that as someone who doesn't own a car!

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to AidanR | 2 years ago
0 likes

My dead-end comment was more that it just turns you back on yourself and doesn't seem to allow access to the area past the school legally. So no use for anyone who would normally use the road when not a school steet, and wanting to get to the same place when it was. 

It would be interesting if making it a school steet also does override the one-wayness of it. In theory it should, but being as they also allow access to residents and other certain vehicles at the same time, who then has "priority"?

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Awavey | 2 years ago
1 like

Well having used a cycle lane that passed a petrol station without give ways for the cycling part and knowing friends who have been knocked off by drivers entering/exiting the petrol station.

Arguably this is the safer approach, at least it warns you to expect whats going to happen.

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JustTryingToGet... replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
3 likes
Awavey wrote:

Well having used a cycle lane that passed a petrol station without give ways for the cycling part and knowing friends who have been knocked off by drivers entering/exiting the petrol station.

Arguably this is the safer approach, at least it warns you to expect whats going to happen.

We've got one on the Henley Road. First and last time I used that cycle path. I use the road after a woman drove as me as I came from her left as she was pulling forward whilst fixated on her right.

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marmotte27 replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
6 likes
Awavey wrote:

Arguably this is the safer approach, at least it warns you to expect whats going to happen.

No use having any cycling infra there then as you'd be better off on the road.
As always the right answer is "Netherlands".

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BalladOfStruth replied to marmotte27 | 2 years ago
9 likes

marmotte27 wrote:

No use having any cycling infra there then as you'd be better off on the road...

Absolutely. The version of the lane with no give-ways places cyclists in more danger because drivers ignore it and cut across it without looking, and the version of the lane with give-ways forces cyclists to stop and get back up to speed multiple times in a short space. In both cases, the easiest/saftest/best option is staying in the main carriageway.

The only thing the local authority has done here is to create conflict, because they've put down unsuitable infra that cyclists aren't going to want to use, and now you're going to have drivers punishing (either verbally or physically) cyclists for riding next to infra that they don't understand either inconveniences the cyclist or puts them in danger.

See also: murder strips narrower than your handlebars that are suicide to ride in, but drivers punish you for riding next to.

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Moist von Lipwig replied to marmotte27 | 2 years ago
4 likes

What people are missing in the twitter thread on the petrol station/cycle lane crossing is that its not a side road - its an access.  LTN 1/20 doesn't cover this properly when you've got constraints, only side roads. You can't really do anything here to set back or change the access geometry to slow entry (tankers still have to get in) as per LTN 1/20 so its very common that the local authority will have something in place on what to do in this situation to cover this and it'll be along the lines of the frequency per hour of vehicles using the access, likley rate of use of the cycle lane, speed limit of road etc.  It'll be a table that ultimately says no don't continue the cycle lane across the access if its going to be at the expense of 20 cyclists/peds in hospital before any drivers take notice of what the arrangement is.

I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the design - just pointing out there'll be factors people are unaware of while they're pointing fingers.

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chrisonabike replied to Moist von Lipwig | 2 years ago
1 like

Ah - so it really is a case of "but we have driveways" then, not just "UK, stuff it"?

Didn't realise LTN1/20 has missed this.  That's a bit poor.  I know that document is not perfect though.  Even if it wasn't just "guidance" - albeit I think it's now linked to local authorities getting new cycle funding?

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Moist von Lipwig replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
3 likes

Driveways are an example of where you would just continue the cycle lane. its where you fall inbetween.  In the twitter example you could have continued the cycle lane, but only if you could have set it back - private land, not happening - or altered the access to make the turn at crawling pace - prob not happening due to delivery vehicles etc.

LTN is good in a perfect world, but where it falls down is when you;re fitting new infrastructure into an existing environment as it provides little help on how to overcome the problems and constraints.  

Everyhting you post on dutch infrastructure would solve a lot of these problems, the trouble is the hierarchy of proiority is well understood, which takes care of the safety aspect.  Over here, any local authority will be in the dock as soon as something goes wrong as they have a statutory safety responsibility. They can't introduce a layout they think will be unsafe, even if its only at the start of its life.  Changing the highway code was the first step, now it needs enforcing to reinforce the idea as normal. tbh - unless every roundabout gets convereted to 'dutch' overnight and it becomes the norm and not just peicemeal infrastructure, we may as well write off this generation of drivers, and hope the next which will hopefull learn to a better standard and understand how to behave around the more vunerable.  

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chrisonabike replied to Moist von Lipwig | 2 years ago
1 like

Don't know the Dutch regs and laws in any detail but I think it's a case of "different philosophy sometimes produces radically different results".  So less "hierarchy of priority" and more there's a different overall goal (e.g. motor vehicle throughput is not the highest priority).  That then leads to different principles and those then guide different approaches (e.g. monofunctional streets, separate infra in many cases, making designs safe by default, self-explanatory and forgiving of human error).

There's an enormous job of retrofitting to do in the UK.  However just as important is to ensure that a) for new development - or even rebuilding - we apply the new standards and b) we don't keep signing off on "things as they were".  That's definitely the case in Edinburgh.  Even as "good for the UK" infra is being built other development which continues to bake in the "old ways" is still being waved through.

On the "getting there from here": it's not just that it's very difficult to change from one "stable state" (e.g. UK car-first status quo) to another.  It also seems we just can't benefit from other places who've already done the work and discovered "what works".  Somehow it seems we can't import more than a couple of new concepts at once.  Or have to "reinvent them" here, often with inferior results.  Possibly how "culture" works - it's evolutionary e.g. change requires a series of small steps, each one has to be "self-sustaining" in some way?

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Also - although the Dutch started from a better place than the UK they also had gone down the road of mass automobility (see Rotterdam, Utrecht's inner-city motorway which has now been completely removed etc.).  They also have "narrow streets" and "but we already built it there, there's no space".

So maybe we need to go back to the Dutch archives for inspiration?  Or just look at the "second class" adaptions of Copenhagen or some places in Germany?  Or what even more recent adopters like Seville or Paris (and plenty others) have done?

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Moist von Lipwig replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

chrisonatrike wrote:

Don't know the Dutch regs and laws in any detail but I think it's a case of "different philosophy sometimes produces radically different results".  So less "hierarchy of priority" and more there's a different overall goal (e.g. motor vehicle throughput is not the highest priority).  That then leads to different principles and those then guide different approaches (e.g. monofunctional streets, separate infra in many cases, making designs safe by default, self-explanatory and forgiving of human error).

Thats what I was meaning, you put it way more eloquently. Unfortunately, traffic throughput is a prime example of another underlying problem - politics - you change the status quo and create traffic queues over above existing and the first thing that happens is that the locals go to their councillors/mp, who then rail at the LA and then become obstructionate to anything as they want to get re-elected.

 

Can't disagree with anything else you;ve said there either.

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Keesvant replied to marmotte27 | 2 years ago
1 like

Being a dutch cyclist, cycle to work every day, and bring my kids to school ...by bike
It is not the cycling valhalla you all think it is..
Close passing is common, the cab situation would be seen as normal.
No one would raise a brow on it over here..

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hawkinspeter replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
7 likes

Awavey wrote:

Well having used a cycle lane that passed a petrol station without give ways for the cycling part and knowing friends who have been knocked off by drivers entering/exiting the petrol station. Arguably this is the safer approach, at least it warns you to expect whats going to happen.

Safer would be to close the petrol station entirely.

With a give-way sign, it seems to imply that turning drivers have priority which goes against pretty much everything in the Highway Code. It's infrastructure designed to confuse people and make a mockery of active travel.

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chrisonabike replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
0 likes

I'm with marmotte27 here.  However it's true that in the UK we will sometimes have to busk it with what is.  Hopefully not making it a worse dog's dinner than already...

Let's have a look at how this could / ought to be done.  Lots of variations.  Randomly (because hungry) picking Gouda (actually due to the excellent example shown in the post here):

Looking a bit old-fashioned now but still "continuous cycle path".  Not brilliant but there is only one "entrance" as this is effectively on a side street.
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@52.0224893,4.6806965,3a,75y,174.69h,67.47t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sQ725RX0zxc-DLtk_AYXXOg!2e0!7i16384!8i8192

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Here's how to do it - continous cycle path, good visibility (vehicles crossing cycle track at near 90 degrees):
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@52.0184035,4.7103176,3a,75y,14.98h,75.58t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sxJWXIBxsOSp4-gGjgpf4MA!2e0!7i16384!8i8192

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

In a "quiet area" (not quite sure why you'd have a petrol station here but this maybe reflects Dutch carriageways being only as large as needed?).
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@52.0066884,4.7065409,3a,75y,75.22h,84.75t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sNrOEHKNG0TtJZ2X2leQsMg!2e0!7i16384!8i8192

 

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