South Perth’s new cycle way on the foreshore is getting plenty of use from families on Sunday. However, for transit riders who try to use it daily the path is significantly more dangerous.
If you are designing a new cycle way for your city you might not do it this way. You might also get some cyclists involved in the design process. The problem here is that the path contains numerous very sharp bends. Both the Mayor and the CEO say that “We have to slow these cyclists down.” Cyclists maintain the opposite view.
There are two sort of cyclists- recreational slow users, out for a ride with children and faster transit cyclists on their way to and from work, using a bike instead of a car. We want to encourage both and must plan for both.
The new winding, bendy path is a pleasure to ride along at a leisurely place while you chat. It is a hazard to use if you are a serious cyclist. The bends are so tight that you must stop pedalling and lift your inside pedal. After dark and before dawn you cannot see where the path goes and risk serious injury. In each case, a cyclist with their shoes clipped or strapped to the pedals has no way of preventing a hard fall.
The unintended result of this is that transit cyclists will be discouraged from using the path and will:
- choose the old path instead, the one with pedestrians, because it is straight
- choose to use their cars, so losing the benefits of cycling: less road congestion, less pollution, less parking space, better health
- ride on Mill Point Road, so being in an environment of higher closing speeds and with much more serious accidents. We really don’t want to have bikes and cars mixed together.
Like the helmet law, this well- intentioned act will result in overall lower benefit to the community. The unfortunate attitude of wanting to slow the cyclists is very controlling. We should do the opposite and facilitate easy transit. Wanting to slow cyclists is like wanting to put speed bumps on the freeway- dangerous and way too controlling.
It seems that our engineers did not consult with users or with the
Bicycle Transport Alliance. They did not understand that transit users have foot straps and clips that fasten their feet to the pedals. They certainly did not think of users after sunset and before sunrise, of which there are very many. They definitely did not understand that to get cars off the road we must make bike travel easy and that bike travel is not the same as a recreational doddle with the grandchildren.
C’mon! We say we are good at consultation. Cycling is fun and is a perfectly viable alternative to driving for many trips. We can do this better and this cycle way must be modified now and made safe.
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