This is not the Cambridge roundabout. It's an example of a different design, the safe roundabout. This design is much more tolerant of driver mistakes and results in a far lower rate of cyclist injuries. Please read my blog post about this design and watch the accompanying video as both of those describe how this design keeps cyclists safe. |
Cambridge in the UK recently opened a "Dutch style" roundabout on Fendon Road to replace another roundabout which had a poor safety record for cyclists in the city. People keep pointing this out to me. I think it's perhaps time for a response.
The design chosen is that which I have consistently recommended against. Why do I recommend against it ? Because it has a poor safety record here in the Netherlands. It has a safety record which is not very different to an uncontrolled crossing or having no cycling facilities at all on a roundabout, which was the situation in Cambridge before this new design was built. I am not convinced that British drivers are better trained or will behave in a safer way on roundabouts than Dutch drivers and therefore I am also not convinced that it will be safer to use this design in the UK than it is here. Dutch drivers have been trained for decades to expect to give way to cyclists under some circumstances and they have also had decades to get used to this type of roundabout, yet it remains unsafe in the Netherlands. Why should we expect this to be different elsewhere ?
Now you might wonder why all my emphasis so far has been on drivers. There's a simple reason. The danger comes from motor vehicles which are faster and heavier than any cyclist. That's why injury rates for cyclists are higher at roundabouts with more cars. Remember always that there is no design of roundabout which is built for cyclists. If it were not for cars then we would have no roundabouts at all and cycling would be all the safer for it.
Dutch research into roundabout safety
Dijkstra's research into roundabout safety in the Netherlands in 2005 is one of the most referenced articles about this subject. Here's a link. It's written in Dutch and having seen the mess that bad machine translations make of this and similar documents I suggest that if you can't read the Dutch then you're best off going no further than the abstract and my explanation below.
The research drew its conclusions from looking at three different earlier studies each of which looked at large numbers of roundabouts. They're well run studies and the people making them attempted to compare like with like. There was no attempt to study only a subset in order to favour a conclusion already drawn by any of the authors. Dijkstra's article is often used by proponents of priority on roundabouts, though I wonder if they actually read it all the way through. It's very clear about the danger caused by giving cyclists priority on roundabouts.
The same data from Weijemars is used here, but just the figures for cyclists and mopeds are included. |
This table shows the number of roundabouts in total, within urban areas, with cycle-paths, with cyclist priority (470), without cyclist priority (314). These numbers come up repeatedly. |
A note about 'mopeds'. Most of the data lumps cyclists and mopeds together because mopeds are not actually very common. They make up around 1% of the total traffic volume. As a result, I don't expect that their presence here makes much difference to any of the results. Low power mopeds which theoretically are limited to around 25 km/h on the cycle-path are losing ground these days to electrically assisted bikes which travel at a similar speed. Many Dutch people really don't like mopeds, but they do seem to like e-bikes which are now far more numerous. The two modes are quite similar from a safety perspective. There does seem to be an indication that 'with priority' roundabouts are more dangerous for faster cyclists (moped, racing bike, e-bike) who are more likely to surprise drivers because their speed makes them more difficult for drivers to spot, hence the idea that they suddenly appeared "from nowhere" over the driver's shoulder. Faster mopeds (limited to 45 km/h) are banned from urban cycle-paths so are not of interest here.
Comparison with a non-signalled crossing
In order to find a point of comparison for the effectiveness of substituting one type of roundabout or another, comparisons were made of 177 locations where non-signalled crossings ('voor, kruispunt') were converted into roundabouts ('na rotonde').
Note that this is not a comparison with traffic light junctions. That's a completely different story which I have addressed elsewhere: well designed traffic light junctions which separate cyclists in time and space from cars create an almost completely safe space for cyclists and as a result have an excellent safety record in the Netherlands. But they are not discussed by Dijkstra. These comparisons are between roundabouts and the straightforward non-signalled crossings without roundabouts or traffic lights which existed in the same location before they were built.
The comparison over time with non-signalled crossings in the same location across 177 junctions gives us a very good idea of the relative danger creating by giving cyclists priority at a roundabout.
In this table they've been separated and we if we consider only the safe roundabouts where cyclists do not have priority ('uit de voorrang') then we see a significant 87% reduction in the number of injuries vs. a non-signalled junction. |
The simple conclusion to reach here is that 'with priority' roundabouts achieve about an 11% improvement in safety while safe roundabouts achieve an 87% improvement in safety, making them eight times safer. However it's not actually that simple. Over the same period of time, non-signalled crossings across the country became on average about 10% safer (Dijkstra last paragraph of page 10) so we should perhaps reduce both outcomes by this amount. That would imply that there is actually almost no significant difference in safety between an non-signalled crossing and a 'with priority' roundabout while a safe roundabout achieves about a 77% improvement in safety for cyclists.
How safe are 'with priority' roundabouts in reality ?
This blog post began with one of the first graphs from Dijkstra which showed the relative safety of cyclists using cycle-paths and cycle-lanes around roundabouts with cycling on the roadway on the roundabout itself. Unfortunately, that graph did not distinguish between the different types of Dutch roundabout which include cycle-paths. However later in the same document with the discussion about replacement of non-signalled junctions, Dijkstra calculates the relative safety of roundabouts with and without priority, and we see that the 'with priority' cause nearly eight times as many excess cyclist injuries as the safe roundabout design. I find it unhelpful that both roundabout designs are presented as one item in that graph as they really are not the same.
Below you'll find a modified version of the same graph showing the likely real-world safety of 'with priority' roundabouts vs. the average for all cycle-paths on roundabouts, cycle-lanes and cycling on the road:
You'll note that up to around 10000 vehicles a day there is no great difference between the black line, showing the rate of injury for cyclists riding on the road, the green line showing a cycle-lane painted around the perimeter and the red line showing the injury rate for cyclists on 'with priority' cycle-paths. Therefore swapping between a roundabout design where cyclists ride on the road to a design where they use a priority cycle-path should not be expected to bring an improvement in safety. The only option which always looks good is the blue line showing as an average for all roundabouts with cycle-paths, which is skewed downward by the greatly improved safety of the safe roundabout design over the 'with priority' design.
Explanation of the red line: Over half of all urban roundabouts in the Netherlands gave cyclists priority when Dijkstra's graph was created. He found that on these roundabouts about eight times as many injuries per year could be expected. i.e. the corrected data for with priority roundabouts should be at about four times the level of that for the safe roundabouts. The red line which I have added to the graph is at approximately three times the height on the Y axis of that for both types of roundabout combined. This places it at approximately at the level we would expect to see if the two different types of roundabouts had been treated as two different cases.
Explanation of blue line shape and stippled red: The blue line, for all roundabouts with cycle-paths, has a rather unusual shape, with a peak at around 10000 vehicles a day before dipping downward and rising again with motor vehicle intensity. I believe that this is caused by priority roundabouts causing the vast majority of crashes and injuries but being built mostly in places with lower motor vehicle intensity. As a result, the blue line is pushed upward in the first half of the graph by crashes on 'with priority' roundabouts, but I think the second half of the blue line is made up to a higher extent of data for safe roundabouts. I used a stippled red line from ~10000 onward because it's likely that it is no longer reliable past this point for the same reason. Unfortunately the separate data is not available so that I can test this hypothesis.
Politics
Back in 1998, SWOV's own research already demonstrated a worse safety record for 'with priority' roundabouts. Their research indicated that 52-73 extra cyclists would find themselves in hospital with serious injuries each year if that design was used. Despite this concern, a political decision was made to go along with a standard recommendation that cyclists should always have priority on urban roundabouts. This happend after they were given two re-assurances: first that the new standards advised by CROW would be applied everywhere and second that introduction of these standards would result in improved safety for 'with priority' roundabouts.
Unfortunately, the expected safety improvement was not realised. This was not merely because the guidelines still were not followed in all cases, but because it was discovered that the guidelines didn't actually have a measurable effect on safety even where they were followed. In an appendix on pages 29 to 35 of Dijkstra ("Voorrang voor fietsers: effect van vormgeving?") it is shown statistically using data gathered from many real world roundabouts spread across the country over five years that there is no detectable difference in safety between 'with priority' roundabouts which adhere strictly to the CROW guidelines and those which do not. Therefore it would seem that roundabouts with significant differences from the norms (e.g. different radii, crossings too close to the roundabout, inadequate road markings, allowing bidirectional cycling around the roundabout etc.) were not worse from a safety perspective at all. The research suggests very strongly that exactly following CROW's guidelines is not important for safety at all. Just one thing makes roundabouts with cycle-paths dangerous and that is giving cyclists priority.
Since the decision was made to go along with the "with priority" guideline in urban areas, the number of roundabouts in the Netherlands has tripled. For that reason we can now reasonably expect that instead of 52-73 extra cyclists receiving injuries resulting in hospitalization or death each year that there are now between 150 and 210 more than would have been the case if the safe roundabout design (used all over Assen with extremely low injuries as a result) had been standardized upon across the entire country.
The CROW argument that roundabouts with priority are "slight less safe" than the safe design was based upon the 52-73 extra casualties being only between 1.8 and 2.5% of the total. Unfortunately, with their number having tripled, we can now expect that these dangerous roundabouts account for between 5.4% and 7.5% of cyclist casualties per year, which is certainly not insignificant. Given that after a period of decline, Dutch cyclist deaths are now rising once again, this is something we should be looking at more closely. We already know how to reduce injuries on roundabouts by 87%. We just have to switch to building the proven safe roundabout design.
Cambridge
So now back to Cambridge. Why did that city outside the Netherlands adopt a design has been proven to cause excess injuries and deaths in the country where it came from ? Why are they following a decision which was made in the Netherlands for political reasons and not based on safety ? Personally, I think they were extremely badly advised.
Valkenswaard roundabout visited in 2006. Not a safe design. See statistics. This roundabout does not conform 100% to CROW standards, but as you can read above, we now know that it probably wouldn't make a difference if it did. |
Now I take a little responsibility for this because I used to live in Cambridge, I was a member of the Cambridge Cycling Campaign who campaigned for Dutch style cycling infrastructure to be built in that city, and I organised study tours in the Netherlands for members of the campaigning group and people working for the council. Indeed, on the first of these study tours, way back in 2006, I was myself enthusiastic about the cyclist priority design of roundabout and I showed it to people from Cambridge.
However my enthusiasm for priority roundabouts didn't last long after I moved to the Netherlands, experienced near misses on these designs, learnt Dutch and read Dijkstra's and other studies of roundabout safety. I change my mind when presented with contrary facts and it's simply not possible to continue to believe that these designs are safe when they clearly are not. That is the reason why I promote the safe design of roundabout, especially in countries outside the Netherlands.
The advantage that the safe roundabout design has is of complete predictability for the cyclist. As a cyclist you can take control of your own safety. While mistakes made by drivers on priority roundabouts where the driver does not cede priority often result in crashes and cyclist injuries, drivers on safe roundabouts who make errors typically just slow or stop when they need not have done. This can actually be slightly annoying for a cyclist who has adjusted their speed to slip across the road before or after any given car, but it's a safe failure mode which doesn't result in injury.
There is also the potential difference between British and Dutch drivers. I've not only cycled but also driven in both countries and I think the ability to drive safely is quite similar between the two countries. However there is a difference in behaviour in that Dutch drivers typically drive more slowly, at least on minor roads and in towns, and that there is less aggression. This is probably also a function of the unravelling of routes which keeps drivers who are minutes late for their destination from making through journeys near cyclists. They are also used to the idea of ceding priority to cyclists on roundabouts and elsewhere, and most people here do cycle. What effect this difference in driver behaviour will have on a roundabout design which requires drivers to cede priority in order to ensure cyclist safety is currently unknown.
Unfortunately the mistake in Cambridge goes far beyond just choosing a poor and dangerous design of roundabout. Their ambition unfortunately went no further than substituting one roundabout design for another and it is now being heralded as a victory for cycling before we even know whether it turns out to be safe in this location. In reality there is no roundabout design which has ever been built for the benefit of cyclists. They're all just ways of trying to address the problems caused by motor vehicles.
Most road junctions in Dutch residential areas look something like this. Much more common than any traffic light or roundabout design, a non-signalled junction in a residential area, with 30 km/h speed limit, raised table, small corner radii, and most importantly it's not a through route for motor vehicles. |
Addressing the problems of motor vehicles could have been done in many other and more effective ways. The roads leading to the location of Cambridge's new roundabout are places where people live. Residential streets which have for years endured high traffic volumes. If they had their usage changed so that they no longer had to support that through motor traffic (already done on a tiny scale in Cambridge) then the roundabout probably wouldn't be required at all. A simple non-signalled junction but with very cars, or if a stream of traffic was required to flow between two arms of the junction perhaps a signalled crossing, would have resulted in a better outcome for cyclists.
You could have asked...
There are few people who have lived, worked and cycled on an everyday basis in Cambridge for more than a decade and who have then done the same in a Dutch city for more than a decade. Fewer still who have written about cycling for decades, about cyclist roundabout safety and made suggestions for how countries outside the Netherlands can best learn from the Dutch experience regarding roundabouts and other infrastructure. Still fewer who have gone to the effort of learning Dutch, reading the research and trying to advise on the basis of that research, and I would guess that also bringing people from the council and the local cycle campaigning group in Cambridge to the Netherlands in order to demonstrate to them the pros and cons of different roundabout designs amongst many other things on top of those other things would make me pretty much unique. I'm also not hard to find.
So do you think anyone from Cambridge ever thought to contact me about their new roundabout ? Of course not. Actually that's a bit unfair. A couple of people on the periphery who were concerned about the direction in which that was going did make contact and I have heard from them how what I'd written was dismissed rather rudely. But why ? Did they have some other local expert who could read the Dutch documents in depth and translate them ? Did they not believe the stats therein ? Did they expect that a design which is relatively dangerous in the Netherlands with Dutch drivers would somehow be less dangerous in the UK ?
I of course don't expect any answers. But it's a shame. I could have helped. I fear that Cambridge will regret what has been done. Not now. Not soon. It'll take a while before you have stats - the Dutch research on which I based my advice was itself based on the stats from many roundabouts over many years. The stats above are based on up to 940 rotonde-jaren, or roundabout years. These results have not been cooked up after just looking at a single location for a few weeks.
Conclusion
I am left with a fear that what Cambridge has done is merely to replace one dangerous roundabout design with another. It's a pity that they have done this because it's been done with such a lot of publicity and this may tarnish the concept and make it more difficult to adopt a better design elsewhere. Britain's cyclists need safe infrastructure. It's high time that they got it instead of ineffective projects like this example. However this is just one junction in one city of a country of many millions of people. It won't in itself make a huge difference one way or the other. No single junction ever could do that.
What is required, in Cambridge and elsewhere, is to start looking at the bigger picture. It is a mistake to think that any real change can result from a piecemeal one junction at a time approach. The UK, and everywhere else, needs a complete grid of effective safe and attractive cycle-paths in order to enable efficient go-everywhere cycling. The Netherlands is fabulous for cycling not merely because some of the roundabouts are safe (as you can see above, some certainly are not). An holistic approach makes the difference. There is nothing new and novel about any of this, it's been known for forty years.
Planning occurs in the Netherlands on a much greater scale than in the UK. There are traffic circulation plans which limit the effect of motor vehicles on residential areas and direct cycle routes. Almost all roundabouts form part of a plan which removes motor traffic, especially through motor traffic, from locations where cyclists need to be to make everyday journeys. This makes even less safe designs safer. But removal of motor traffic can even result in a much bigger prize: the removal of roundabouts and traffic lights altogether from cycling routes. Cyclists don't themselves need either of those types of junctions. They are not actually for us, but exist only to moderate motor traffic. There exist very good traffic light designs which benefit cyclists and roundabouts which do likewise but in both cases these things should only be built where there is no choice. i.e. where it's impossible to get rid of the motor vehicles. Cyclists are always better off without big road junctions. This has happened on a large scale at least around the centre of most Dutch cities, spreading outward from the centre in many cities and into the renovation of old suburbs and the design of new suburbs. The process did not begin by changing the design of a single busy junction which will remain busy, but then making a lot of noise about it as if a great change has been achieved.
The piecemeal approach, resulting in years of little or no real action and the effect of such small forward steps as occur usually being swamped by backward steps elsewhere, is precisely why people in the UK have gone from saying that their country is 20 years behind the Netherlands to 40 or 50 years behind. It's only possible to catch up by doing the hard work required to make things better, consistently over years. This is something which no country can afford not to do: when all things are considered, it's cheaper to build cycling infrastructure than it is not to build it.
Update May 2023
Three years later we now have reported collision data for the Cambridge roundabout. In the three years since the roundabout was rebuilt as "Dutch" style there have been 10 collisions, including three which caused serious injury. In the three years before the change there were just six of which none were serious.
13 comments:
A well-reasoned article as always David. As you say, it will be sad if this more dangerous priority configuration results in injuries or worse, and would be a big set-back if that caused bad publicity as a result.
Still, I think there's a couple of reasons to have hope still... For one, if I'm not mistaken, the crossings have zebra-crossing light poles, which may make drivers more alert than just a bit of white road paint like Dutch drivers receive. Furthermore, I suspect most British cyclists will be (understandably) more cautious than their Dutch counterparts when approaching the crossing and expecting priority, at least initially. I suppose only time will tell, but what a shame the designers didn't take the more cautious approach as you've been advocating for so long...
The real reasons?
Firstly,Ego.
Everyone involved (councillors, officers) was hungry for the press coverage of being the “first”.
Secondly, Arrogance
Those same councillors and officers refused to believe the evidence presented to them,by a dedicated bunch of local residents. (What could THEY know?)
Thirdly, Determination. ( and dollops of subterfuge)
The Cambridgeshire County Council Project Managers MUST have known than their publicly stared budget of £800k was far too low. However, they also knew that had they stated the TRUE cost at the outset they would have been laughed at.
£2.4 MILLION could be spent so much more usefully elsewhere.....
Dara Morefield
(Chair, QEW Residents’’ Association)
Very much appreciate the research summary. I would like to hear your thoughts on why the Fietsersbond continues to support roundabouts with priority for cyclists.
Of particular note, they acknowledge the difference in injury rates, but suggest that the amount of car traffic could be a confounding factor in the other direction! In order for this hypothesis to explain the observed injury rates, cyclists would have to be more likely to have priority at high-traffic roundabouts. This doesn't make any sense to me -- I agree with your intuition that cyclists would be less likely to be given priority at roundabouts with a lot of traffic.
They also argue that cyclist priority means that bicycling is easier and more comfortable, which I'm not so sure is the case. One is indeed less likely to have to come to a complete stop, but I find the cyclist-priority roundabouts more complex to deal with, because of the uncertainty about whether cars will in fact stop for you -- more looking around, more eye contact, greater sense of risk. That said, I didn't grow up biking in the Netherlands, so I tend to be a more careful cyclist here than the average Dutchie. :)
Most recent Fietsersbond policy statement: https://vrijwilligers.fietsersbond.nl/fiets-op-rotondes-binnen-de-kom-stand-van-zaken-anno-2020/
And a CROW memo with the report from DTV Consultants attached: https://files.fietsersbond.nl/app/uploads/sites/66/2020/04/15113942/20191209-Verbeterpunten-rotondes-CROW-memo-aan-IW.pdf
Jacob, I'd seen these documents. The report from DTV confirms once again that with priority roundabouts are more dangerous than those where cyclists do not have priority. Their figures show 0.73 cyclist injuries per year with priority in comparison with 0.18 without, a factor of just over 4. i.e. they've provided yet another confirmation of that basic fact.
It's notable that they make a comment early on that cycle-paths with two bidirectional cycle-paths are safer, but on reading this the first thought that came to mind is that as it's very rare to see a bidirectional cycle-path on a with priority roundabout and very common on roundabouts where cyclists do not have priority it appeared to me that they were actually reporting the same thing here. i.e. priority results in more danger. Reading further through the document to the stats on page 13 reveals that that is indeed the case. Bidirectional paths are safe to use on roundabouts without priority, but dangerous with priority.
They report that a larger roundabout diameter corresponds to fewer cyclist injuries, which is as expected, but surprisingly they also say that a narrower berm between the road and cycle-path is safer, which is contrary to expectations. This is perhaps because motor vehicle spees are then higher and drivers are looking at the roundabout and not at the earlier cycle crossing. This of course also suggests that with priority paths which are not much different to a cycle-lane are not disadvantaged, which their figures confirm later on.
DTV report that over the period 2015 – 2018, there were registered cyclist injuries at 1244 roundabouts out of a total of 5585. 572 cyclist injuries per year, of which 287 were serious. Given their calculated 4x greater danger of with priority roundabouts it would seem that my guess of 150-200 extra serious injuries per year could actually be a little lower than the reality.
DTV gives a figure of 0.77 injuries a year for a roundabout with cycle-lane on road, 0.73 for a roundabout with priority, 0.18 for a roundabout without cyclist priority, 0.13 for a roundabout where no cyclists are allowed at all and 0.09 for roundabouts with no facilities - cyclists on the road. I would suggest that the majority of the roundabouts with no facilities are in places with very little traffic. Otherwise their results support my conclusion above that with priority roundabouts have no real safety benefit over cycling around the perimeter in a lane. It shouldn't be surprising because they are infact almost exactly the same thing.
As for Fietsersbond, unfortunately I find that they often take an illogical position. The word "priority" is so attractive that I understand why people think that they want this. But there are better places to prioritize cycling than on roundabouts, which are junctions designed primarily to deal with the danger from cars. The reason why I wrote about the roundabouts in Zwolle in particular was because local Fietsersbond members insisted on claiming that their roundabouts were safer than ours. That turned out not to be even remotely close to the truth, with even individual priority roundabouts in that city accounting for many more injuries than all of Assen's 21 roundabouts put together. But I know people personally who still insist that that design is "safer".
"Remember always that there is no design of roundabout which is built for cyclists."
Well, there is this one: https://vimeo.com/210193087
And others on rail trails, notably this: https://goo.gl/maps/PTQ4JBoemB51cQMv5
(Sorry, tree-shaded, I wish I had a good picture). Some roundabouts are designed specifically for bicyclists!
Hi David, always interesting to see your perspective on these issues. One thing that intrigued me about the Cambridge roundabout (and when I reflected on my time in The Netherlands, also their roundabouts) is the lack of use of raised platforms for the crossing paths. Here in NZ, we are looking to use these in growing numbers to address issues of motorist speed and compliance at ped'n and cycle crossing points (also used for raised intersections overall as well to address safe system deficiencies).
When I think about The Netherlands (and review my photos), I only occasionally came across raised crossing points at some minor side roads and some mid-block crossings. I can't think of any roundabout, with or without cycle priority, where they were used. Now I appreciate that the geometry of typical Dutch roundabouts themselves does a pretty good job of managing traffic speeds. But it seems like another potential way to address the safety concerns you have cited at the cycle (and usually ped too) priority roundabouts; to help slow down motorists further and probably improve their likelihood to give way. Indeed, Paul Schepers' 2013 PhD at Delft on the subject found a good positive safety effect of raising priority bicycle crossings. Interested to hear your thoughts on this.
As far as I can tell three of the arms of the roundabout are basically compound crossings (the recent formalization of "tiger" crossings). These have the same rules as zebra crossings, ie before crossing a pedestrian or cyclist should wait for any approaching motor vehicles to stop, but drivers are supposed to give way when they see someone at or approaching the crossing. This is not the same as giving cyclists priority, which is what has been built on the fourth arm of the crossing.
I like zebra crossings. They give people the opportunity to cross safely, since almost all motorists will stop for someone waiting at a zebra crossing, but they wont stop for someone trying to cross the road away from a crossing. A compound crossing should confer the same benefits to cyclists, but I really don't like the design that was formalized (https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/cycle-zebra-crossing-rules.249745/#lg=attachment468872&slide=0). Drivers know what a zebra crossing is, but the cycle part of a compound crossing is nothing like as salient as the zebra part, and drivers will likely not understand what they are looking at (possibly for the first time in their driving career). Surely it would have been better to give the cycle crossing the same zebra striping? Painting it red, as Cambridge have done, just adds to the potential for misunderstanding (by cyclists).
Making the fourth arm a different design from the other three is simply nuts, IMHO. It will suffer from the problems David wrote about, but also it just adds to the confusion. Why not make all the crossings the same, preferably making them all compound crossings to the official design (even though I think that design really needs to be changed).
John: I should have known that someone would find a counter example ! That's an interesting case. It's not completely free of motor vehicles as the video shows a service vehicle using the same roundabout, but by the look of it the usage is dominated by bikes. Of course anything actually works for bikes in the absence of cars. Do you think it actually offers any real advantage for cyclists over a simple crossroads ?
The rail trail example is probably less easy to justify because I assume it doesn't see any motor traffic except maintenance vehicles and I imagine the cyclists in that location are fewer in number. Sometimes such things get built but I don't think there's really any point in them.
Glen: Raising priority crossings does I'm sure help to reduce the speed at which drivers cross them, but I think it's important that the cycle-path is some way back from the start of the raised table. I discussed this a few years back when I wrote about priority crossings. They're difficult to apply in a safe way. Many of them have quite awful records of injuries to cyclists.
It's another of those cases where of course the idea of being prioritized is always attractive, but perhaps a crossing isn't always the best place to do it. In most Dutch cities, the most dangerous location for cyclists is either a crossing or a priority roundabout.
Robert: The inconsistency across the arms in Cambridge is surprising as this will surely make the situation more confusing. It's not uncommon for safe roundabouts in the Netherlands to be quite asymmetrical, but as they don't rely for safety on driver behaviour this doesn't seem to matter.
I'm not sure that I'd agree that *all* drivers in the UK stop for zebras as I've experienced a few who did not. However, the vast majority certainly do. As you point out, it's something that is drilled into people quite well in their instruction. However I had incidents of drivers who would deliberately not stop and shout abuse at me when I wheeled a bike across zebras, so I think adding bicycles to this may not automatically work. As for the crossing design at the cyclechat link, I don't think much of it. It's confusing. There's nothing to indicate to a motorist that they should stop for a bike and, as you say, painting it red will make cyclists think they can ride across, creating a dangerous situation.
Priority crossings, even away from roundabouts, are dangerous. There are few places where they are safe, regardless of the design. I personally don't think it is often worth this risk. I think it's better to prioritize cyclists in other ways where it doesn't result in added danger, taking a whole system approach to ensure quicker journey times by bike instead of trying to bolt on priority in inherently dangerous situations (e.g. http://www.aviewfromthecyclepath.com/search/label/unravelling, but also http://www.aviewfromthecyclepath.com/search/label/default%20to%20green )
Just to be clear, the crossing design pictured in the cyclechat link is the officially approved design that the Department for Transport came up with in response to proposed "tiger" crossings. The proposal was for a cycle zebra crossing with yellow stripes, hence "tiger" (https://www.wokinghampaper.co.uk/on-the-road-thats-right-thats-neat-i-love-your-tiger-feet/ is the best I've managed to find). I've never understood why the DfT didn't simply make it legal for cyclists to use zebra crossings. In my experience of using zebra crossings in this way, it's rare motorists wont stop, and the practice is safe for pedestrians because the nature of zebra crossings means most only see one non-motorised user at a time. British councils are quite happy to make pavements shared use, yet they are usually much narrower and often have a high pedestrian density. Yes, I'm sure there are a few cretins that shout abuse, but they should consider that someone riding a bike will be on the crossing for a lot less time than someone walking or pushing a bike (which is entirely legal), making the delay to their journey far less. Alas there are some people who just have a completely irrational response to bikes, no matter how they are used. They may refuse to stop, but the next driver probably will.
Robert: The problem with letting cyclists use zebras is that many of them are in places where cyclists can't assume priority with any safety at all. The photo at your link is one of those places. A cyclist emerging from behind the casa.ch building on the left in front of (UK) motor traffic on the left of the road simply couldn't possibly be seen by a driver going along that road in time to stop. It works for pedestrians because pedestrians are very slow so this increases the time that drivers have to see them as well as decreasing how far into the road they'll have walked by the time a car which isn't stopping arrives at the crossing.
In Norway I found that cyclists legally use pedestrian infrastructure including crossings, but it's normal to dismount to cross and though there were still problems I think that improves the safety. Pedestrian infrastructure is never really convenient for cyclists, but in the absence of proper cycling infrastructure it can provide vital links and I personally think that in the UK cyclists should be allowed to use the pavement (with pedestrians having priority there) wherever there is no proper cycling infrastructure. It's of little help for fast adult cyclists but enables older people and parents to get about with their children.
Sure, infrastructure designed for pedestrians does not create great cycling infrastructure, but it already exists and using it for cycling helps build demand for proper cycling infrastructure. When there is a lot of motor traffic I use a zebra crossing near where I live to make a right turn on to a main road. Since I'm making a right turn, I'm not traveling at speed. There are few if any pedestrians, the sight-lines are good, and the crossing overcomes my lack of an accelerator to floor. I then ride the short distance to my next (left) turn on the pavement, a pavement that sees few pedestrians. Thanks to Home Office guidance (to the police), I am allowed to ride on the pavement on both sides (because I deem the busy carriageway to be unacceptably life-threatening), but riding on the much wider crossing between the two pavements is illegal. That makes no sense to me.
Making it legal to cycle across zebra crossings would have made it much easier for councils to take cycleways (ie proper cycling infrastructure) across roads. Previously they had to choose between nothing or a toucan crossing. They can now at least install a compound crossing, but that just creates one more thing for motorists to misunderstand.
Making it legal to cycle zebra crossing just requires a change in the law, and would address both these situations.
David Hembrow: As John Ciccarelli says in the video about the University of Davis roundabout, https://vimeo.com/210193087
a crossroads-type intersection would be unable to handle the volume of bicycle traffic at class-change times. The roundabout allows traffic to flow steadily. Motor vehicles also use the roundabout, it is on a university campus where motor-vehicle accesss is limited, posted speed limits are in accord with bicycling and speeds are determined by the dominant more, bicycling as well as deflection in the roundabout. There are examples somewhat like this in the Netherlands, actually, but they work by creating an all-ways exclusive traffic-signal phase for bicyclists. They can't handle as large a bicycle volume, as motor vehicles enter on another phase.
Advantages of the roundabout on the Cape Cod Rail Trail, as you say, not obvious -- and particularly as some cyclists cheat and ride the wrong way around when it is shorter. But there is a little rest area in the middle. I think that the governing factor here was: "we have the space for this, why not?"
Some have commented on the differences between the arms. The reason for this is that the preferred option is to have an island between the motorised traffic entry and exit lanes on each arm, but on Queen Edith's Way (East) there simply isn't sufficient width.
It is not the only compromise enforced by the constrained site. There are many. One of particular interest are the exits from the annular cycle track. The Dutch design is to put these as far away as possible from the vehicle exit, so that drivers get the earliest indication whether a cyclist is exiting or continuing around the ring. This is important, because it allows drivers to see whether or not they need to give way.
At Fendon Road roundabout, the forks are just before the arms, so drivers have no clue whether or not a cyclist will leave the roundabout or cross an arm until it is too late to react.
Cambridgeshire have taken a fundamentally flawed design, and put their own special spin on it to make it worse.
Which design do you think is now appearing in UK government literature - the Dutch design, or the compromised version?
Post a Comment