An opportunity to request safer infrastructure, segregation, crossings, etc
https://routestrategies.highwaysengland.co.uk
https://routestrategies.highwaysengland.co.uk
That ship has sailed. Motorways and the more troublesome quasi motorways won't be humanised any time soon, so I'd settle for having parallel cycle-friendly roads created or recreated as an improvement.I don't want segregation. I want roads to be appropriate for all legal users, and drivers very firmly compelled to respect vulnerable road users.
If Highways England could take a break from changing their name again and pay some attention, they'll find that to understand such a simple concept is hardly taxing.
Agree with this, I had that recently on a route I planned, we were fortunate to get a reasonable gap to make the first right and then an oncoming motorist slowed right down to let all 4 of us make the 2nd right back off the A road in front of them. A short section of paving or similar through a lumpy but wide verge would have made a lot of difference (or a rideable surface on the footpath one field back).Great. There are many places on the major road network where 100m or so of cycleway or some sort of crossing island would connect two quiet back roads instead of requiring two right turns across a busy 60mph road that deters all but the bravest, or reconnects roads cut by a motorway or dual carriageway. It's possibly the biggest benefit per cost in rural areas after rail trails.
I think Highways England are only interested in the A roads in Kent that they manage, but I expect at least one of these probably farks up some perfectly pleasant cycling routes:Big problem with some of the A roads in Kent and around is that they carve up the countryside and, although I do sometimes ride short stretches of the busier A roads, they are not nice to ride on and can be very hard to cross. [...] I'll have a think about responding.
I think Highways England are only interested in the A roads in Kent that they manage, but I expect at least one of these probably farks up some perfectly pleasant cycling routes:
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So suggest they fix it, but it's not in Kent so I don't think @Dogtrousers was talking about it!Not just those. The A35 trunk road in the New Forest completely severs a rather pleasant lane that would make part of a nice circuit. But there’s no way across. I look at it when planning some cycle loops for myself and my wife. I gave up on them and we didn't take bikes in the end. Just walking in forest instead.
So suggest they fix it, but it's not in Kent so I don't think @Dogtrousers was talking about it!
That ship has sailed. Motorways and the more troublesome quasi motorways won't be humanised any time soon, so I'd settle for having parallel cycle-friendly roads created or recreated as an improvement.
I also oppose segregation, in that I don't want any more roads lost to cycling, but I've no problems asking for new roads where sharing with lethal pothole-makers is a barrier to cycling.
Only because Highways England don't publish single-county maps of their roads.Well your in your post I was replying to, your map was hardly just Kent.
When we did a NF cycling weekend (not the type that needs Flags of St George ) , I too gave up on the on-road planning bit and we took the gravel bikes, as there is a shed load of really good routes using the forest paths and the odd minor road to link up.Not just those. The A35 trunk road in the New Forest completely severs a rather pleasant lane that would make part of a nice circuit. But there’s no way across. I look at it when planning some cycle loops for myself and my wife. I gave up on them and we didn't take bikes in the end. Just walking in forest instead.