Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

"High death and injury rates among cyclists alarm road safety campaigners"

24567

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,161 ✭✭✭buffalo


    It's not segregated, as its only parttime bike lane. 7-10 am and midday til 7pm. Outside of those times you can park away there.

    Are you sure? There's a small kerb and several bendy poles dividing it from the main carriageway from my recollection. Granted, I only walked past it twice, and one of those times it was dark and I'd been drinking.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 6,857 Mod ✭✭✭✭eeeee


    I agree with Jep on infrastructure. It plays to the idea that cycling is an inherently dangerous idea. It also takes cyclists away from cars, making them less used to dealing with cyclists, which, given the culture here is an awful idea. We are far from the cycling utopia that is the Netherlands, so really getting drivers used to sharing the roads goes a good bit further towards safety and tolerance than the intermittent, bumpy, unmaintained, debris-strewn, badly thought out red paths that currently exist. Less of those please.


  • Administrators, Social & Fun Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 78,458 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭Beasty


    Cycling isn't dangerous. Cycling infrastructure is a massive waste of money.
    Not only is it a waste of money, it helps perpetuate the "us and them" myth. Roads are in a pretty bad way in many places, and they can't even afford to maintain them properly - any new cycling infrastructure is likely to get equally neglected


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,130 ✭✭✭coolbeans


    Beasty wrote: »
    Pity the RSA don't follow threads like this, as they really do themselves a disservice with the way they try and twist the stats to suit their own agenda

    ... but everything that the RSA does and says is from the perspective of a motorist looking through a windscreen. They've consistently proved themselves unfit for purpose. Tossers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,479 ✭✭✭rollingscone


    Beasty wrote: »
    Not only is it a waste of money, it helps perpetuate the "us and them" myth. Roads are in a pretty bad way in many places, and they can't even afford to maintain them properly - any new cycling infrastructure is likely to get equally neglected

    Don't forget creating the chance to call Cyclists Ungrateful.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,489 ✭✭✭dissed doc


    Moflojo wrote: »
    Call me a radical, but I don't think cyclists should have to die in order to instigate the construction of good, basic cycling infrastructure.

    Actually a lot of people will probably die in order to get an improvement in infrastructure. That is precisely how the Netherlands ended up with the improvements in the 1970s, due to the amount of children being injured and killed while biking (Stop de Kindermoord).

    At some point the injuries and deaths in Ireland would reach a tipping point and lead to action (but in ireland, probably banning bikes).

    The Netherlands uses the (I am jokingly referring to) apartheid style, with bikes separate from cars separate to tram - everyone separated from everyone else for a lot of the time. It works well, definitely. .

    The other style is common in Germany, which half the footpath width being marked for bike use. That also works well, but assumes personal responsibility between pedestrians and cyclists to not act like asses or be obstructive, too fast, dangerous. That works in Germany, Switzerland and Austria quite well.

    For a lot of the broad footpaths in the centre within the canals, it would be simple to demarcate a 1 or 1,5m width for biking and just say that is biking, deal with it! No hassle with traffic lights, or big expense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,908 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    I think I'll write to the IT about this. Does anyone see any flaw in my argument that the 2012 spike in injuries they make much of is predominantly an increase in minor injuries, and the general trend up to 2013 in fatalities was very much downward?

    I don't think the IT made anything of the claim that Dublin was a particularly dangerous place to cycle, so perhaps that can be excluded.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    I am. They could be the best cycle lanes in the world, but they'll still a.) harden the perception among non-cyclists that cycling is so dangerous they need to be segregated and b.) reinforce the perception among many motorists that cyclists don't belong on the road.

    Cycling isn't dangerous. Cycling infrastructure is a massive waste of money.

    I'm surprised that in 2015 we still have to have this argument. Almost every city that has increased the amount of cyclists on its streets and lowered the injury rates has done so by building segregated infrastructure. Countries that advocated the vehicular cycling approach (no segregated paths/lanes; cycling with motor traffic) such as the UK and US have extremely low levels of cycling, and high injury rates. Thirty years of promoting vehicular cycling in these countries has led to no measurable improvement in the safety of cycling.

    The countries with the highest levels of cycling and the lowest injury rates are the ones with huge amounts of segregated infrastructure (Denmark, The Netherlands). But the response here is along the lines of 'those countries are different and if we try to build infrastructure it'll be all crappy and it's better if we just build nothing'.

    The relentless negativity of this culture of low expectations is damaging in the long run. About 1-2% of people will cycle no matter what the road conditions are. But you won't get more than 1-2% of people cycling on a regular basis if you get rid of all the cycle lanes, and the fewer cyclists there are, then the more unsafe the roads become. As the example of Dublin shows, the more cyclists on the road, the safer they become. The best way to encourage more people to cycle is to set them apart from motor vehicles, so that cyclists aren't intimidated by them.

    Most of the infrastructure constructed in Ireland to date has been poor, but that's no reason to damn all cycling infrastructure. The quality of the stuff being built now is far higher than was was built 10 years ago, and in another 10 years I think we'll see even better infrastructure being built.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    gadetra wrote: »
    I agree with Jep on infrastructure. It plays to the idea that cycling is an inherently dangerous idea. It also takes cyclists away from cars, making them less used to dealing with cyclists, which, given the culture here is an awful idea. We are far from the cycling utopia that is the Netherlands, so really getting drivers used to sharing the roads goes a good bit further towards safety and tolerance than the intermittent, bumpy, unmaintained, debris-strewn, badly thought out red paths that currently exist. Less of those please.

    Surely it highlights the fact that cycling is quick and easy and can be safely done without having to share lanes with motor vehicles. About two years ago I heard a talk given by an AECOM engineer who was modelling cycle traffic flows in Dublin - he discovered that a huge number cyclists went out of their way to use the Grand Canal Cycleway, even if it significantly lengthened their trip. This is because segregated infrastructure made them feel far safer and made cycling much more enjoyable.

    I don't buy your argument about taking cyclists away from cars making cycling less safe. One of the most dangerous things I have to put up with on my daily cycle is close overtaking from motorists, regardless of my lane positioning. If I could cycle straight ahead in a lane, and the motorist could drive straight ahead in their lane then surely that it would make it safer for the cyclists, no? Cars are still going to have to encounter cyclists at junctions, and the more cyclists on the road, the more they are going to look out for them at junctions.

    And this idea that we're far from being like The Netherlands - is that an excuse not to build any infrastructure? Could you not demand more and better infrastructure so that you don't end up with crappy lanes, rather than fatalistically demanding that none be built. It's like that old Jewish joke -
    How many Jewish mothers does it take to change a light bulb?
    (Sigh) Oh, don't bother. I'll just sit here in the dark.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Politics Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,276 Mod ✭✭✭✭Chips Lovell


    There's so many strawmen in that post I don't know where to start.

    But I'll tell you what's relentless negativity. It's constantly telling the public that cycling is so dangerous they need to always wear a helmet and high visibility clothing. It's telling people that sharing the road with other traffic is so dangerous that cyclists should be segregated if at all possible. This is despite that fact that if we have more than 10 cyclists deaths in a year it's regarded as notable.

    And then we wonder why more people don't opt for cycling. Why people who let their children cycle to school are seen as grossly negligent. This constant scaremongering is counterproductive.

    I'm unaware of any country, certainly not the US or UK, where cycling is actively promoted as a safe, accessible and convenient mode of transport without the attendant hysteria of helmets, high viz vests and cycle lanes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    But I'll tell you what's relentless negativity. It's constantly telling the public that cycling is so dangerous they need to always wear a helmet and high visibility clothing. It's telling people that sharing the road with other traffic is so dangerous that cyclists should be segregated if at all possible. This is despite that fact that if we have more than 10 cyclists deaths in a year it's regarded as notable.

    And then we wonder why more people don't opt for cycling. Why people who let their children cycle to school are seen as grossly negligent. This constant scaremongering is counterproductive.

    I'm unaware of any country, certainly not the US or UK, where cycling is actively promoted as a safe, accessible and convenient mode of transport without the attendant hysteria of helmets, high viz vests and cycle lanes.

    I'm largely with you on the first two of these points, but I don't think that cycling among traffic is so dangerous that it requires segregations. I'm well aware that cycling isn't all that dangerous in and of itself, otherwise I wouldn't be doing it every day. However, the vast majority of the populace look upon cycling among traffic as a extremely intimidating and dangerous activity. Segregated facilities are the only thing that will convince them that cycling is a safe and appealing thing to do. I am someone that wants to see a culture of mass cycling in Ireland, and I believe that providing high-quality segregated infrastructure is part of that.

    Leeds Uni did produced a report a few years back called the Understanding Walking and Cycling Report, which concluded:
    To summarise, from our analysis of the influence of the physical environment on cycling it is clear that traffic is a major deterrent for all but the most committed cyclists. Potential cyclists, recreational (off-road) cyclists and occasional cyclists are discouraged from using their bicycles for everyday urban journeys because of their fear of cars and heavy goods vehicles... It is essential that the urban environment is made safe for cyclists. This requires the provision of fully segregated cycle routes on all arterial and other busy roads in urban areas. It is clear from the research that most non-cyclists and recreational cyclists will only consider cycling regularly if they are segregated from traffic.

    http://www.its.leeds.ac.uk/fileadmin/user_upload/UWCReportSept2011.pdf

    As for being 'unaware of any country, certainly not the US or UK, where cycling is actively promoted as a safe, accessible and convenient mode of transport without the attendant hysteria of helmets, high viz vests and cycle lanes'. Surely The Netherlands and Denmark are such countries?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,489 ✭✭✭dissed doc


    I'm unaware of any country, certainly not the US or UK, where cycling is actively promoted as a safe, accessible and convenient mode of transport without the attendant hysteria of helmets, high viz vests and cycle lanes.

    There is no hysteria now in NL or DK.

    And I think it is unfair and simply incorrect to include hysteria about helmets and hi viz, in the same sense as cycle lanes being separate. It works to separate traffic lanes. That is why the Luas is generally separate to cars, and cars separate to pedestrians. We are doing it already. The only difference is adding a new separation for bikes.

    While safety is a feature of a separate lane, the big difference will also be in numbers cycling and pollution, and long term health benefits. There are still accidents on separate lane systems of course, but overall would see a reduction. It is an overreaction to say that it is "due to cycling being so dangerous". That is media spin, and should be ignored like other types of extremism.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 6,857 Mod ✭✭✭✭eeeee


    Subpopulus wrote: »
    I'm largely with you on the first two of these points, but I don't think that cycling among traffic is so dangerous that it requires segregations. I'm well aware that cycling isn't all that dangerous in and of itself, otherwise I wouldn't be doing it every day. However, the vast majority of the populace look upon cycling among traffic as a extremely intimidating and dangerous activity. Segregated facilities are the only thing that will convince them that cycling is a safe and appealing thing to do. I am someone that wants to see a culture of mass cycling in Ireland, and I believe that providing high-quality segregated infrastructure is part of that.

    This is where I see getting rid of cycle lanes as a positive. It normalizes cycling on the road, as a normal and safe part of traffic. Other road users come to expect cyclists on the road, cyclists are not treated as Other on the road, as really delicate and vulnerable nuisances that hold up traffic and have to be segregated for their own safety. Potential cyclists then don't see cycling as something inherently dangerous and risky, instead as something completely normal and safe and tolerated on a grand scale by all traffic.
    The key is instilling cycling as a normal, safe activity, not in need of special lanes or the like to be so.

    The success of the cycle lane not eh canal can't be ignored either though, I wonder how many people have become regular cyclists as a result of it alone?

    Currently the biggest source of contention in my daily cycling is crap cycle lanes I don't use. They haven't learnt either, new lanes put in this year are so badly designed I don't use them either. Motorists get pissed off I'm not using them, and the idea of more of the same does not appeal to me. If there were none or just lines painted on the road it would remove that contention. I suppose my opposition is borne out of experience of segregated cycle lanes that currently exist, which has been almost (not completely but almost) universally poor, which is depressingly negative!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,908 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    coolbeans wrote: »
    ... but everything that the RSA does and says is from the perspective of a motorist looking through a windscreen. They've consistently proved themselves unfit for purpose.

    Worst of all, page 7 of the document implicitly promotes cable locks. Pity, as they could have squeezed in another picture of a helmet instead.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,110 ✭✭✭Skrynesaver


    My problem with segregation is that I cycle thought the city from well past the suburbs, I'd like motorists to see me as a normal part of their commute rather than an insane aberration that "appears from nowhere" when we get outside the areas that will have cycle lanes.

    I've had 2 hospital visits as a result of 40+ years cycling, the first was because someone turned right through a dedicated cycle lane without looking for weird alien bike forms, the second was when I lost the back end on a cycle lane that had not been gritted though the road had, my experience of cycling infrastructure in this country is that it's fine if you're a 12 year-old but the road is actually safer (provided we all use it).</2_cents>


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    gadetra wrote: »
    This is where I see getting rid of cycle lanes as a positive. It normalizes cycling on the road, as a normal and safe part of traffic. Other road users come to expect cyclists on the road, cyclists are not treated as Other on the road, as really delicate and vulnerable nuisances that hold up traffic and have to be segregated for their own safety. Potential cyclists then don't see cycling as something inherently dangerous and risky, instead as something completely normal and safe and tolerated on a grand scale by all traffic. The key is instilling cycling as a normal, safe activity, not in need of special lanes or the like to be so.

    But how do you convince people that cycling in moving traffic is a safe and normal thing to do? Forcing people out of cycle lanes and into general traffic lanes almost certainly going to do it. Studies like the one I gave above show that regardless of the risks, people just don't want to cycle among motorised traffic because the find it intimidating. Read the quote from Leeds Uni report again-
    To summarise, from our analysis of the influence of the physical environment on cycling it is clear that traffic is a major deterrent for all but the most committed cyclists. Potential cyclists, recreational (off-road) cyclists and occasional cyclists are discouraged from using their bicycles for everyday urban journeys because of their fear of cars and heavy goods vehicles... It is essential that the urban environment is made safe for cyclists. This requires the provision of fully segregated cycle routes on all arterial and other busy roads in urban areas. It is clear from the research that most non-cyclists and recreational cyclists will only consider cycling regularly if they are segregated from traffic.

    Aside from dramatically reducing the amount of traffic on the roads, how do you persuade people that cycling among general traffic is a safe and normal thing to do? Bear in mind that in the UK, where that report was written, cycling is much the same as in Ireland in that it mostly takes place in general traffic lanes rather than cycle lanes, so it's already normal to cycle on the road and other road users expect to see cyclists on the road.


  • Administrators, Social & Fun Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 78,458 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭Beasty


    Subpopulus wrote: »
    But how do you convince people that cycling in moving traffic is a safe and normal thing to do? Forcing people out of cycle lanes and into general traffic lanes almost certainly going to do it. Studies like the one I gave above show that regardless of the risks, people just don't want to cycle among motorised traffic because the find it intimidating. Read the quote from Leeds Uni report again-



    Aside from dramatically reducing the amount of traffic on the roads, how do you persuade people that cycling among general traffic is a safe and normal thing to do? Bear in mind that in the UK, where that report was written, cycling is much the same as in Ireland in that it mostly takes place in general traffic lanes rather than cycle lanes, so it's already normal to cycle on the road and other road users expect to see cyclists on the road.
    Clearly in Ireland (and indeed the UK) plenty of people are convinced enough to contribute to the recent upsurge in cycling within each country.

    Of course, as others have said, cycling is actually a relatively safe activity, despite the best efforts of some (including the likes of the RSA) to try and paint it as much more dangerous. Even the recent return to very high volumes of motorised traffic has not had a major impact on serious cyclist injuries and deaths (which remain at pretty much an all-time low - well since the bike became a popular mode of transport anyway!). However if the RSA and news organisations want to continue sensationalising some very modest (and frankly unreliable in terms of the sorts of conclusions they attempt to draw from them) stats on the subject, they could perhaps look more at the volumes of motorised traffic to explain some of the fluctuations in the figures. Personally though, having kept my eyes on the stats via the various discussions we regularly have on here, I am really not seeing an issue.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    Subpopulus wrote: »
    Aside from dramatically reducing the amount of traffic on the roads, how do you persuade people that cycling among general traffic is a safe and normal thing to do? Bear in mind that in the UK, where that report was written, cycling is much the same as in Ireland in that it mostly takes place in general traffic lanes rather than cycle lanes, so it's already normal to cycle on the road and other road users expect to see cyclists on the road.

    On phone so difficult to contribute.

    THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO RESTRICTING OR REDUCING MOTOR TRAFFIC OR TO CONTROLLING IT FOR THE BENEFIT OF OTHERS.

    I apologise for shouting. If you start segregating cyclists (or pedestrians) as an "alternative" to controlling motor traffic then, as night follows day, what happens is you start seeing cyclists and pedestrians being managed for the benefit of cars.

    What characterises cities with high levels of cycling is not segregated infrastructure it is an acceptance that motor traffic must be managed for the benefit of others rather than promoted at all costs.

    In the UK, among the most car dependent cities are Milton Keynes and Peterborough both are "new towns" that were planned with extensive segregated cycling infrastructure.

    In Galway, the parts of the city that have the highest cycling levels have effectively zero "cycling infrastructure" (and prior to the last census Galway had higher levels of cycling to work than Dublin). These parts of the city work because they werent "planned" around putting everyone in cars and then adding cycling or pedestrian facilities as an afterthought.

    This is not to dismiss segregation as being part of the solution but if it is applied in the wrong context, if segregation is applied as an end in itself then it is more likely to become part of the problem


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    Beasty wrote: »
    Clearly in Ireland (and indeed the UK) plenty of people are convinced enough to contribute to the recent upsurge in cycling within each country.

    There hasn't really been much of an upsurge though. In the UK cycling as a mode of transport is flatlining at about 1.5% of all journeys made, with London pretty much the only outlier of growth. It's been at the same level for about a decade.

    Cycling makes up about 1.3% of all trips in Ireland, which is growing by about 0.1 percentage points PA at the moment. There's certainly growth in some of the cities, but when looked at nationwide, it's pretty minimal. Cycling is still an extremely marginal mode of transport. At least 9 out of 10 people aren't cycling on a regular basis.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 837 ✭✭✭Subpopulus


    THERE IS NO ALTERNATIVE TO RESTRICTING OR REDUCING MOTOR TRAFFIC OR TO CONTROLLING IT FOR THE BENEFIT OF OTHERS.

    I apologise for shouting. If you start segregating cyclists (or pedestrians) as an "alternative" to controlling motor traffic then, as night follows day, what happens is you start seeing cyclists and pedestrians being managed for the benefit of cars.

    What characterises cities with high levels of cycling is not segregated infrastructure it is an acceptance that motor traffic must be managed for the benefit of others rather than promoted at all costs.

    This is not to dismiss segregation as being part of the solution but if it is applied in the wrong context, if segregation is applied as an end in itself then it is more likely to become part of the problem

    Sorry if I was unclear - I wasn't trying to suggest that segregation is the only way to do things (I'm aware of filtered permeability, traffic calming, hierarchy of measures and all that), but I'm more trying the counter the idea that dedicated cycle infrastructure causes more harm than good.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 2,912 ✭✭✭galwaycyclist


    Subpopulus wrote: »
    There hasn't really been much of an upsurge though. In the UK cycling as a mode of transport is flatlining at about 1.5% of all journeys made, with London pretty much the only outlier of growth. It's been at the same level for about a decade.

    Cycling makes up about 1.3% of all trips in Ireland, which is growing by about 0.1 percentage points PA at the moment. There's certainly growth in some of the cities, but when looked at nationwide, it's pretty minimal. Cycling is still an extremely marginal mode of transport. At least 9 out of 10 people aren't cycling on a regular basis.

    Sure but in the UK, as in Ireland, cycling is hanging on by its fingernails in the face of official hostility. Arguably what pushed cycling in London were the terrorist attacks that shut down the tube and buses. People walked into any bike shop they could find, bought a bike and cycled home, and the next day some of them used the bike again. Arguably cycling in London hung on despite, rather than because of, official interventions. It hung on because there was still a "folk memory" within which cycling was still "available" as a form of transport.

    Measures like the census of population are very crude and only capture the main form of transport. Data from the slan health behaviour studies indicates that 28% of Irish adults used a bike in the previous year.


  • Administrators, Social & Fun Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 78,458 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭Beasty


    Subpopulus wrote: »
    At least 9 out of 10 people aren't cycling on a regular basis.
    I would be surprised if 1 in 10 were - that would be an exceptional take-up in my view. I also don't accept your point about the number of journeys being made. Your own "stats" imply an annual increase of approaching 8% in journeys made (although it's possible that the average length of journey is also increasing)

    There have been a number of factors at play both in Ireland and the UK. Some have taken it up for health reasons, others due to cycling being a cheap form of transport in a recessionary period. The respective BTW schemes have also encouraged quite a few to take up cycling.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,908 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    Editorial
    http://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/editorial/sharing-the-road-1.2307915

    Red-light jumping, Even Stevens, shared responsibility, wear hi-viz.

    Took the RSA's stats at face value.

    Do newspapers ever look closely at RSA stats, or is it just cut-and-paste?

    (Mind you, I remember an editorial they did after the crash about property prices where they seemed to think that a 10% rise in property prices followed by a 10% fall would leave you where you started. So maybe they're not well placed to look at numbers closely.)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166 ✭✭lismuse


    Maybe this is the solution to the great helmet debate ?
    //www.bbc.com/autos/story/20140626-no-helmet-no-problem


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 159 ✭✭Buchaill_Mor


    I am coming around to the idea of a TFL type solution for Dublin. Congestion charge, but no profits allowed. Any monies made after administration to go into infrastructural improvement. Promotion of multi-modal transport, with Fingal, DunLaoighre Rathdown and Dublin Co Co working in conjunction with Dublin City Council to provide patroled out of town park & ride facilities, with joined up thinking on LUAS, bus services (private & public), and cycling facilities. It should be not just about bikes, but buses, taxi's, LUAS.

    Eventually, I would like to see a ban on non Public Service Vehicles from an area broadly covering from Huston Station and between the Canals. (Guinness will have to start using their gates at Hueston), with an exemption for disabled drivers. (More regulation of the Blue stickers would be needed.) Further out, I do believe that the reason that a lot of people don't cycle is that they are scared of cars, so while I like the ideal of Vehicular cycling, we are far from there, and I think a much better infrastructure is required, encompassing segregation, for commuters, school kids, and leisure cyclists. In the city, instead of kerbs etc, planters and just the basic repainting of the road layouts I feel would be a massive help. Janette Sadik-Khan, I think did a great job for New York.

    And finally, enforced legislation. For car drivers, cyclists, and the 1.5 mtr passing distance. Helmets and Hi-Viz. Down with that sort of legislation. Should be optional.

    I know this is not going to be popular, amongst lots of people for lots of reasons, but I firmly believe the car is not the answer. My 2 cents. And now, let rip.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 469 ✭✭JBokeh


    I agree that cycle lanes are a bad idea, especially in places where they're retrofit onto a road, in Cork city a lot of them were just tacked onto the sides of the road, making the road lanes so narrow that anything wider and longer than a hatchback will end up driving in them at some point because the road tapers suddenly, and the cycle lane stays the same width, making it dangerous for a cyclist that doesn't see it coming. To build proper cycle lanes in a city you would want to bulldoze the whole street and start again, making the road wide enough, the cycle lanes properly thought out and nowhere that the cycle lane will suddenly dump you onto the road.
    Or even better than painting red streaks up the side of roads is to spend that money on actually maintaining the roads and not segregating anyone making it a shared space and better for everyone

    Anybody actually seen how they use the roads in The Netherlands? You wouldn't see many people cycling like they're in a mad hurry to get somewhere, it's like they're all out sight seeing, meanwhile the drivers are mainly mental for taking risks but you don't see much possessiveness about the road, yet when the two meet there is extreme courtesy shown. In Ireland everyone leaves the house pissed off and 5 minutes later than they should have, and where leaving someone make a mistake, or merge in front of you without honking is seen as a sign of weakness


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 562 ✭✭✭Flatzie_poo


    I am coming around to the idea of a TFL type solution for Dublin. Congestion charge, but no profits allowed.

    Dublin city centre traffic is a pussycat compared to London pre-congestion charge traffic.

    Charges aren't needed to reduce traffic to make it easier for cyclists.

    Education for both sides into shared safety responsibility, defensive instead of aggressive commuting, and common sense is what's needed here.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,908 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    I've come to distrust the "shared responsibility" philosophy. It usually ends up with emphasising all the things cyclists and pedestrians have to do to show how grateful they are for motorists looking where they're going, or how they should carry around extra equipment as analogues to devices that are built into cars by the manufacturers anyway.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 562 ✭✭✭Flatzie_poo


    tomasrojo wrote: »
    or how they should carry around extra equipment as analogues to devices that are built into cars by the manufacturers anyway.

    What?


Advertisement