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Crap Cycle Lanes, Warrington Cycle Campaign (2007)
Eye Books 1 903 070 589 113pp £4.99
A stocking-filler book cataloguing the failings of UK cycle-lane
construction

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Designed for consumption in the houses smallest room, this book
was spun out of a web sites gallery of shame. The source material
was plentiful. Here are cycle lanes so short that a unicyclist would struggle
to set off, before leaving the dedicated road space; routes that are rendered
impassable by street furniture and, junctions so hazardous that the motivations
of the respective local authorities are open to question.
It is a well-deserved and effective send up, even if the accompanying
text follows a rather curious formula. Reading the book, it is impossible
not to muse on how such facilities can have been created? Cycle lane construction
is not cheap, and most of these facilities were designed and installed
by highly qualified and well-meaning staff. Perhaps the problem is that
while there exists some will to establish cycle lanes, there are neither
the funds, determination nor specific skill base to make them anything
other than a sticking-plaster remedy. This book demonstrates that, this
being the case, in many cases, it is a sticking plaster that we would
be better without.
Is that something about which cyclists can do anything? Perhaps one
step would be to start celebrating really good cycle lane creation
particularly where challenging problems in dense urban environments have
been effectively solved. If we did, it might do a bit to shake our reputation
as ingrates, who demand the world and then mock those unwise enough to
pay us any heed.
PS January 2009
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