• Olympic countdown - Reasons for a London Cycle Map, #96: Making long, straight cycle routes out of backstreets.

    #96. MAKING LONG, STRAIGHT CYCLE ROUTES OUT OF BACKSTREETS. When it comes to continuous, direct cycle routes, the authorities and major cycle advocacy groups have had an imagination failure. London’s major roads provide continuous, direct routes, so let’s put more cycle lanes there, right?

    Not necessarily. When segregated cycle lanes can be slotted into major roads and junctions, there’s no harm in doing so. But this policy will realistically never provide a set of continuous, direct and safe cycle routes unifying all areas of the capital. Too much infrastructure change would be required.

    But there is another way to create a set of continuous, direct and safe cycle routes unifying all areas of the capital: identify long, straight routes in the existing London Cycle Network – which is composed mostly of smaller, quieter streets – and then sign these routes properly.

    Parker’s London Cycle Map has provided the template for such a plan. Properly implemented, his map would be equivalent to making cycling motorways out of backstreets. Instead of remembering hundreds of street names to pursue a straight trajectory on the London Cycle Network, you’d just need to follow the signs for a particular route code.

    In signing the London Cycle Network in this way, all areas of London would instantly be connected by long, straight cycle routes on safer streets. Given that cyclists are currently dying, month on month, on major roads, simply trying to get from A to B as directly as possible, the authorities and cycle advocacy groups are showing great hypocrisy in overlooking the London Cycle Map.

    The imagination failure which is afflicting cycling development in the capital is, in effect, ushering people into harm’s way.

    www.petition.co.uk/london-cycle-map-campaign

  • Olympic countdown - Reasons for a London Cycle Map, #97: Just like a Sky Ride

    #97: JUST LIKE A SKY RIDE. Sky Rides have proven enormously popular, and a great way to encourage new cyclists to give it a go. The lack of traffic and the presence of marshals, signs, markings and lots of other riders reassures would-be cyclists that they won’t get lost or come to harm.

    Alas, Sky Rides are just temporary. When the day is over, the event infrastructure is disassembled and the streets tend to go back to the same congested and polluted places they were before.

    A properly implemented London Cycle Map would be like a permanent Sky Ride. With signs and markings all along the routes and maps at the junctions, as well as lower traffic and high numbers of other cyclists, the London Cycle Network would attract hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of new riders. It would become host to the equivalent of a mass Sky Ride every day.

    www.petition.co.uk/london-cycle-map-campaign

  • Olympic countdown - Reasons for a London Cycle Map, #98: Complementing the Cycle Hire Scheme

    #98: COMPLEMENTING THE CYCLE HIRE SCHEME. London’s Boris Bikes (or Ken Bikes, depending where you stand), have been a huge success. Yet other similar schemes around the world have achieved more usage in the same amount of time.

    A probable reason is that cycling in London can be an intimidating prospect if you don’t know where the best cycle routes are. A London Cycle Map, positioned helpfully beside the Cycle Hire docking stations, would provide users with instant and easily digestible information about where the best cycle routes are, and how to access and follow them.

    This would make hiring a bike in the capital much more user-friendly.

    www.petition.co.uk/london-cycle-map-campaign

  • Cycle Lifestyle issue 7: invitation to advertisers and contributors

    Cycle Lifestyle issue 7 is publishing at the end of May 2012. We’re calling on businesses and enthusiasts to support our magazine.

    Advertisers now get a better deal than ever, with a load of freebies thrown in when you buy an advert in the magazine. Contact us on info@cyclelifestyle.co.uk to find out more.

    Cycle Lifestyle issue 7 will be featuring the usual favourites – including the Peddler, the New Bike on the Block, Give it a Go, and the Best Cycling Streets in London. But we’re always on the lookout for new contributors – have you got a talent for writing or art and would like to get involved?

    Our London Cycle Map Campaign is gathering steam as the Olympics approaches. If you want to help the UK’s only free cycling magazine that's designed for non-cylists as well as cyclists, and if you want to help London develop the innovative cycling network it so badly needs, then we look forward to hearing from you.

    info@cyclelifestyle.co.uk

  • Olympic countdown - Reasons for a London Cycle Map, #99: Fun exploring

    #99: FUN EXPLORING. It’s early Sunday morning, the bikes are oiled and clean, and you and your friends or family are ready to set out to explore the London Cycle Network.

    With the help of the London Cycle Map, signed and coloured routes would guide you virtually anywhere in the capital easily and without fuss – even somewhere you’ve never been before. Never mind an Oyster Card, with a London Cycle Map the whole capital would be your oyster.

    And even when you decide to explore off the network, you’d never get lost. Just head in the same direction and you’d inevitably bump into one of the London Cycle Network routes again. All this exploration awaits you – and all it needs is a few signs and road markings to make it possible.

    www.petition.co.uk/london-cycle-map-campaign

  • CyclingBuddy.com

    There's a cool new site which allows its members to find other riders to go cycling with. CyclingBuddy.com launched on 1st March 2012, and has already attracted close to 2,000 cyclists who between them have already logged well over 60,000 miles and shared over 400 cycling routes.

    Leading company Chain Reaction Cycles have recently backed the project, which we wish every success.

  • Olympic countdown - Reasons for a London Cycle Map, #100: Navigation made easy

    With 100 days before the Olympics begin, and the eyes of the world increasingly on London over the coming months, this is a great time to provide a rundown of 100 reasons why a London Cycle Map would be a blessing for the capital.

    #100. NAVIGATION MADE EASY. The most obvious benefit. Instead of having to remember hundreds of turn-rights and turn-lefts, with a London Cycle Map cyclists could remember just a few coloured routes, and follow them by looking out for signs and road markings on the London Cycle Network. Travelling by bike would be as easy as catching the Tube: get onto the network; follow signs; then get off the network at the nearest point to your destination.

    www.petition.co.uk/london-cycle-map-campaign

  • Hannah Lewis - new website

    Well done to one of our guest illustrators and keen cyclist Hannah Lewis, who has launched a great new website showcasing her lovely work: http://hannah-lewis.co.uk

  • Bike tours and a film competition in Kensington and Chelsea

    Hats off to London Borough of Kensington and Chelsea for their innovative efforts to inspire local residents onto two wheels.

    As well as offering a series of themed cycling tours this summer, which will reveal the secret haunts and history of the local area, the borough's 'Bikeminded' team have set up a competition for the best short film promoting cycling.

    Further details of the film and tours can be found here.

  • Hazard symbol design competition

    An innovative competition is seeking a design for a new hazard symbol to be placed on the rear of large road vehicles. The closing date for entries is Midnight, April 30, 2012. Find out more at: www.intandemcompetition.com

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