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Tour du Danger

Saturday saw a somewhat unconventional city bike tour in London when what began as a fact-finding mission into the capital’s top accident spots organised by the Cyclists in the City blog escalated into a full-blow spectacle with several hundred participants. Rather pleasingly it became know as the ‘Tour de Danger’ and Cyclo can only hope it becomes an annual event to highlight the city’s black-spots. In the three weeks leading up to the TdD three cyclists had been killed in London, two on Bow roundabout alone – an area that the London Cycling Campaign is championing for change.

 

London’s ten deadliest spots, according to statistics from Transport for London are:

 

1 – Clapham Road/ Kennington Park Road/ Camberwell Road Junction

2 – St. George’s Road/London Road/ Elephant & Castle Junction Southwark

3 – Elephant & Castle/Newington Butts Roundabout

4 – Albert Embankment/Kennington Lane/ Wandsworth Road Junction

5 – Millbank/Lambeth Bridge Junction

6 – Hyde Park Corner Westminster

7 – Strand/Northumberland Avenue/Whitehall Junction (Trafalgar Square)

8 – Waterloo Road/ Stamford Street/ York Road Junction

9 – Clerkenwell Road/Farringdon Road Junction (Kings Cross)

10 – Mansion House Street/Princes Street/ Threadneedle Street

 

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First Cycle Superhighway Death

A 50-year-old cyclist has died in a collision with a lorry on the roundabout at the Bow flyover on one of London’s cycle superhighways, a Transport for London spokesman confirmed that this marks the tragic first fatality since the scheme was officially launch in July, 2010. A man has been arrested on suspicion of dangerous driving in connection to the death.

 

The cycle superhighway scheme, the aim of which is ultimately to create continuous routes into central London for cyclists, was first announced back in 2008 by then-Mayor Ken Livingstone. Four routes are already in operation – Bow to Aldgate, Barking to Tower Gateway, Merton to the City and Wandsworth to Westminster – with 8 more due to come online by 2015.

 

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The Trixi Solution

Trixi MirrorAlmost two years ago Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, confirmed that he was seeking government approval for a cycling initiative involving the use of so-called Trixi Mirrors. The system, a simple and inexpensive convex mirror solution, mounted at lorry-cab height on posts (most suitably traffic lights) at junction would reduce driver blind-spots and thus help to eliminate, or at least reduce, the disproportionate number of cyclist deaths on the Capital’s roads. A year later, in July 2010, Transport for London (TfL) announced that “The first cycle safety Trixi Mirror to be trialled in a UK city has been installed on a traffic signal at a junction in Tooting, south London.” The press release went on to confirm that a further 37 would be installed along London’s “Barclays Cycle Superhighways”.


Despite this, and indeed the hugely successful use of “Trixi” Mirrors in both Germany and Switzerland where deaths have been demonstrably reduced, the Capital still sports a mere 39 sites where they are employed, many of which are now in poor repair. TfL and the Mayor’s Office have, it has been reported, gone rather quiet on the subject and cyclists continue to be killed in numbers – a great percentage by left-turning lorries. The Guardian’s Paul Dean, a fervent supporter of the Trixi, has set up the “Petition for Paula” (named after 20-year-old student Paula Jurek who was tragically killed by a lorry on April 5, 2011) – Cyclo invites you to add your name to it at the link below.


http://www.gopetition.com

 

Almost two years ago Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, confirmed that he was seeking government approval for a cycling initiative involving the use of so-called Trixi Mirrors. The system, a simple and inexpensive convex mirror solution, mounted at lorry-cab height on posts (most suitably traffic lights) at junction would reduce driver blind-spots and thus help to eliminate, or at least reduce, the disproportionate number of cyclist deaths on the Capital’s roads. A year later, in July 2010, Transport for London (TfL) announced that “The first cycle safety Trixi Mirror to be trialled in a UK city has been installed on a traffic signal at a junction in Tooting, south London.” The press release went on to confirm that a further 37 would be installed along London’s “Barclays Cycle Superhighways”.

Despite this, and indeed the hugely successful use of “Trixi” Mirrors in both Germany and Switzerland where deaths have been demonstrably reduced, the Capital still sports a mere 39 sites where they are employed, many of which are now in poor repair. TfL and the Mayor’s Office have, it has been reported, gone rather quiet on the subject and cyclists continue to be killed in numbers – a great percentage by left-turning lorries. The Guardian’s Paul Dean, a fervent supporter of the Trixi, has set up the “Petition for Paula” (named after 20-year-old student Paula Jurek who was tragically killed by a lorry on April 5, 2011) – Cyclo invites you to add your name to it at the link below.

http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/boris-install-mirrors-that-save-cyclists-lives-petiti.html