Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 139 total)
  • Another dead cyclist in London
  • br
    Free Member

    Sad news. I can’t quite believe that it being a woman again is just coincidence. If we could work out why the combination of tipper lorry/ female cyclist is so lethal we might be able to mitigate the risk.

    I bought this up a few years ago, and got a load of grief for been ‘sexist’.

    I also saw this when Scooters took off after the original congestion zones were put in – they were like Lemmings and seemed to have little road-sense; at least compared to motorcyclists.

    ribena
    Free Member

    We could put all the technology in the world on board

    You would still see people cycling up the inside of them at traffic lights

    yet this time they wouldn’t get killed. Why do you think its always tippers and hgv’s, but its much rarer for busses to be involved? Its because they can’t see a thing.

    http://londonist.com/2011/10/amazing-escape-in-cyclistlorry-crash-in-london-bridge.php

    “…people started shouting “Stop! Stop!” and I could hear a rapid crunching/popping noise.
    Turning round I saw an articulated lorry, driving toward the bridge.
    On her back, knees bent and feet on the front bumper, was a lady who was being pushed along the ground by the lorry- her bike was just going under the front wheel which was the crunching/popping noise.
    The driver was looking around him at all these people shouting “Stop! Stop!” and shrugging- his reaction was “they cannot be shouting at me”, so he kept going.
    It was probably all over in seconds, but it seemed to be a long time before he finally decided that the people (including myself) who were waving/pointing at him, the lady and shouting, did mean that he should stop.
    The lady cyclist probably got pushed 2-4 metres, hard for me to judge and I’m wary of exaggerating.
    When he stopped lots of people rushed over and escorted the lady to the side of the road, she was fine, just shocked, she said that she thought she had made eye contact with the driver at the lights, but then he’d just driven straight into her/over her bike.”

    mefty
    Free Member

    The road layout of that junction was pretty much the same in 1300 so I think those roads predate bikes and cars.

    nemesis
    Free Member

    Indeed but it’s not the case that bikes aren’t suitable for them.

    DezB
    Free Member

    ninfan
    We could put all the technology in the world on board

    You would still see people cycling up the inside of them at traffic lights

    Ooh looky. The fave videos of the anti-cycling brigade. Super.

    badnewz
    Free Member

    Im with Shermer. I sat on the steps of St Pauls the other day and watched the cyclists going by, to my horror, many could barely ride the things (lots of boris bikes), and didn’t have the faintest clue of looking over your shoulder etc.

    I don’t know anything about this case but the answer is not banning lorries from London (it is a working city).

    The only long-term solution is complete separation between cyclists and other road users.

    fourbanger
    Free Member

    The whole ASL entry needs to be revised to prevent this from happening. Everybody seems to want to ignore this and I can see why as it would involve a lot of work. The road layout places cyclists on the inside of vehicles and when that vehicle happens to be one with badly adjusted mirrors a large blind spot, the result is another dead cyclist.
    If anyone in charge actually wants to stop this from happening, the road infrastructure needs to be redesigned, but it’s cheaper to tell cyclists to not go up the inside (contrary to the lane markings) and to legislate so lorries get additional safety systems. Lets not pretend that anyone that can fix this really gives a **** or that anything is going to change soon.

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    prezaxctly, mefty.

    even if “it was cyclists, and not motorists, who first pushed for high-quality, dust-free road surfaces” arguing that roads were built for bicycles is a bit of an extrapolation, to say the least, and isn’t going to get you very far as an argument, particularly as so much of the road construction, marking and infrastructure, priority etc. clearly is designed for motorised traffic.

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    B) the number of cyclists who I see taking crazy risks as well as having absolutely no intention at all of following any of the basic rules (red lights, one way systems, cycling on pavements etc) are, well, certainly the majority if not pretty much all of them.

    Don’t know where in London you cycle, but I don’t see that at all. Same proportion of rule breakers on bikes as anything else. Cars might be RLJing on “only just red” rather than mid-cycle, but 90%+ of the cyclists I see will wait for the green light.

    dknwhy
    Full Member

    Sad, sad news. Feel awful for the victim and their families. Sickening that something as simple as going to work can end up like this.

    Anyone know how the cyclist death rate compares to the scooter death rate at these type of junctions? Is it a similar story for other vulnerable road users?

    ribena
    Free Member

    https://www.tfl.gov.uk/cdn/static/cms/documents/casualties-in-greater-london-2013.pdf
    In 2013…
    11% of fatalities were cyclists, who have 2% modal share (measured by “journey stages”)
    17% of fatalities were powered 2-wheelers, who have a 1% modal share

    molgrips
    Free Member

    The whole ASL entry needs to be revised to prevent this from happening.

    I see a lot of ASLs where the entry, such as it is, is on the right of the leftmost lane. Don’t know how prevalent it is in what cities though.

    brakes
    Free Member

    I’ve ridden through this junction every day for the past 8 years. First cyclist fatality that I’m aware of. I’ve seen the aftermath of a few car crashes, scooter/ motorbike crashes and pedestrians being hit in that time.
    It is a terrible junction, especially where you get traffic turning right as there are no lines guiding you where to be, and you’ve got situations where there can be a flow of traffic in the junction turning right then another light will go green whilst the traffic is still flowing through.
    You don’t see tipper trucks going through the junction regularly though.
    I’ve always thought about avoiding Bank – I might do so now.
    Regardless of who is to blame for this death – there needs to be action on cyclists being educated about not going near lorries and lorries having better visibility of other road users (cars, m/bikes, cyclists and pedestrians).

    brooess
    Free Member

    B) the number of cyclists who I see taking crazy risks as well as having absolutely no intention at all of following any of the basic rules (red lights, one way systems, cycling on pavements etc) are, well, certainly the majority if not pretty much all of them.
    Don’t know where in London you cycle, but I don’t see that at all. Same proportion of rule breakers on bikes as anything else. Cars might be RLJing on “only just red” rather than mid-cycle, but 90%+ of the cyclists I see will wait for the green light.

    +1 – sounds like you live in a different London to me. Or suffer from confirmation bias or are simply jaded… it’s also an incredibly subjective view and thus is unhelpful in finding any kind of solution.

    My preference would be to accept that roads are dangerous for cyclists – mainly from a combination of lousy infrastructure and lousy attitude towards cyclists and provide more training so cyclists can minimise that risk.
    And let’s be clear, bad attitudes towards cyclists CAN be changed – other European countries have far most positive attitudes than UK.

    Evidence at the moment appears to be that both infrastructure and culture are improving, but very slowly…

    In the meantime, I cycle c100 miles a week in London and on club runs and as yet, have not been hit. I’ve been riding for 38 years, and not been knocked off… so safe riding is 100% possible. I give credit for this to my grandad who told my mum in the 1950s when she was learning to drive to assume everyone else on the road is an idiot and drive accordingly… plus ca change!

    I did my Bikeability Stages 2 and 3 a couple of years ago and learnt loads. This, I think is the solution… not mandatory, but massively, massively encouraged. We don’t throw trainee skydivers out of the plane lack a sack of spuds, we put them through several days of training as it’s accepted there’s a risk so newbies are taught how to manage that risk. Same with cycling – all new bike purchases should come with a voucher for Bikeability (which is provided FOC of the local authority anyway) + a massive push from local authorities and TFL. An idea from one of my clubmates yesterday – if you can prove you’ve done your Bikeability, discount off the new bike…

    This is NOT victim-blaming, it’s accepting there’s a risk for cyclists until infrastructure and culture change, and in the meantime, give us the tools to manage that risk… every adventure sport – skydiving, climbing, mountaineering, caving, diving etc have been working like this for decades – accept there’s risk, identify the risks, work out a plan for dealing with it, teach it to the new starters… the process is well-established so no reason not to apply it to cycling.

    T1000
    Free Member

    Just fixing the infrastructure is only part of the answer

    Legislation for ‘Professional’ drivers need to follow the same principles as HSAW

    those owning, Managing, directing transport need to share the sanctions of the Law for the actions of those in their employment. Only then will it get the attention needed.

    There are undoubtably drivers who should not be in charge of a wheelbarrow….however people making £££ put them behind the wheel

    so you may have unsuited people..un unsuitable vehicles…with dangerous deadlines to meet….

    There are of course many highly skilled and considerate drivers out there…but unless the penalties flow upward through organisations then these tradgedies will continue

    shermer75
    Free Member

    Fair enough, it is a subjective opinion, I agree with you there. It would be useful if there were some actual statistics, but I couldn’t find any. So here’s an equally subjective video to not really back up my case either:

    [video]https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9e9eeCbWzQI[/video]

    brakes
    Free Member

    I’m not sure how, if at all, the media’s attention on cyclists contributes to accidents, but there is certainly far more attention given to cycling fatalities in the London and National media than other fatalities on London’s roads.
    You hear about every cycling death, but there are 4 times as many pedestrian deaths and 2 times as many motorbike/scooter deaths and you don’t hear about all of them.

    dave360
    Full Member

    The HSE has been working with the construction industry to improve site safety for several years now. In particular I remember this report to the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. ‘One Death is too Many: an Inquiry into the Underlying Causes of Construction Fatal Accidents’, July 2009.
    http://www.dwp.gov.uk/publications/policy-publications/fatal-accidents-inquiry.shtml

    However it seems that it doesn’t matter that construction vehicles that are slaughtering cyclists on the highway because it’s someone else’s problem. Imagine the outcry if there was a construction worker death a month due to unsuitable and lethal machines on site.

    spursn17
    Free Member

    Is there a hierarchy of truck drivers?

    Of course there is, it’s not usually an Eddie Stobart truck, or one from the big well maintained fleets is it?

    People, stay away from tippers, scaffolding lorries, bin lorries, and cement mixers (although some of these seem a little better over the last year).

    Being a regular commuter in London I’m not scared at all on the roads, you just need to use your loaf. The thing that gets me is that there is no law enforcement for anyone, all types of road users get away with whatever they feel that they can as there’s an extremely small chance that they’ll get caught.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    I’ll just repeat what I’ve said on all the previous sadly similar threads:

    Until we have the full facts as to what and who did what and when, all this seething rage, jumping to conclusions and pitchfork sharpening may be in vain.

    aracer
    Free Member

    Based on the video evidence you provided.

    Though as already pointed out, being daft enough to cycle down the inside of a truck shouldn’t be punished by a death sentence – improving the visibility from the cabs of the trucks might stop them driving over people. Because let’s not forget, even if the cyclist made a mistake in where they positioned themselves all of the danger still comes from the truck. It’s the truck which drives over people and kills them. If Google made tipper trucks there wouldn’t be a problem with cycling down the left side of them at junctions, as they simply wouldn’t run over anybody who did that.

    neilthewheel
    Full Member

    We could put all the technology in the world on board

    You would still see people cycling up the inside of them at traffic lights
    The first video shows what I suppose is a Cycle Super Highway. Why has this got a lorry in it? If the clear road markings show cyclists should be in that lane, why should cyclists (particularly inexperienced ones) not suppose they should then be on the left hand side of left-turning lorries? And the lorry driver, knowing he is in a cycle lane, should expect to find cyclists alongside him.
    In the second vid, well the gap is tight but at least the guy knows the vehicle on the left isn’t going to turn right across his path, and the vehicle on his right won’t turn left.
    But the bottom line is, why do we imagine mixing all this stuff up together on the roads is a reasonable approach? It’s like suggesting pedestrians have to walk on the railway lines, then blaming them if some of them fail to step out of the way of the train in time.

    aracer
    Free Member

    and I’ll repeat what I’ve already said. It makes no difference what those facts are – a tipper truck (which is acknowledged to have poor visibility from the cab) has driven over somebody. How the person got there is irrelevant, we need to start acknowledging the elephant in the room.

    T1000
    Free Member

    Within the construction industry , the big players are very focused on safety within their demise.

    The principles I alluded to were that by following the principles used within HSAW and treating the highway as a workplace for Professional drivers the responsibility for other occupants would extend beyond the drivers to the managers, directors …and thence to the pockets of shareholders….

    aracer
    Free Member

    So how many people do cyclist kill on the roads every year? Even if it’s not directly the motorists who’ve done something wrong in every single incident (though it is in the vast majority), they’re still the ones who’ve introduced a killing machine to the roads which would be perfectly safe for other road users if they weren’t there. How well cyclists ride is an irrelevance. Not only that, but your last sentence introduces one of the standard fallacies – that how other people riding bikes behave somehow has an effect on my safety when I’m on a bike. I expect motorists to drive well because that’s only reasonable – I could mention that I always follow the rules when cycling as a reason for expecting them to drive well, but actually that is also a complete irrelevance.

    mashiehood
    Free Member

    very sad news. I know the junction well and whilst a busy section, its equivalent can be found across London in various configurations.

    The cycle lane on the inside of that junction. Judging by the positioning of the stationary lorry, my guess is the cyclist went into the cycle lane on the inside. Once the lights went Green the lorry turned left and the cyclist went straight, resulting in a collision and the subsequent head injuries which have resulted in another lost soul.

    There are two things to consider:

    1. whether it is appropriate to have cycle lanes approaching junctions. In my view (and i commute via moped and cycle on a regular basis into london) is that all cycle lanes should terminate 50 meters before a junction – to avoid giving the cyclist the impression they are safe / have right of way.

    2. We can all play the blame game / unsuitable infrastructure / banning lorries. Banning lorries during the day into London would have a major consequence to business and livelihoods, at the same time major changes to infrastructure don’t happen over night. The key thing is to educate in safety and be hard on those who break the law / drive dangerously. To me the recent sentences handed down are far too lenient.

    DezB
    Free Member

    The first video shows…

    Losing battle, neil. People will see what they want to see.

    (I’m inclined to agree with an earlier story – the only one in the wrong is the guy filming and uploading those videos.)

    br
    Free Member

    How the person got there is irrelevant, we need to start acknowledging the elephant in the room.

    We have, folk take stupid risks.

    mashiehood
    Free Member

    How the person got there is irrelevant, we need to start acknowledging the elephant in the room.

    im sorry but its very relevant – me walking into the middle of a road expecting to be safe is not sensible!

    kimbers
    Full Member

    me walking into the middle of a road expecting to be safe is not sensible!

    but walking down a part of the road, painted a special colour that means it is only for pedestrians to use that are hailed as a great revolution in transport infrastructure ?

    aracer
    Free Member

    If when you walked into the middle of the road the lorry driver which ran you over couldn’t see you then that would be a valid analogy. You still seem to be missing the big issue here of the lack of coincidence of the lorry type involved.

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    I was surprised to read this in the 2013 annual report on road traffic casualties

    “Pedal cyclist deaths have seen a long-term fall, but have fluctuated
    between roughly 100 and 120 over the last six years. Since records
    began in the 1920s, the highest annual figure seen for cyclist deaths
    was 1,536 in 1934. The lowest annual figure for pedal cyclist deaths
    was 104 in 2009, 93 per cent lower than the 1934 high”.

    1536!!!! What was that all about? OK there were probably more bikes but a hell of a lot less motor traffic.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    driving them into ASL boxes

    95% of the time ASL boxes are perfectly safe, in fact they are a really good invention that enhance both speed and safety for cyclists 95% of the time

    The other 5% of the time, they have an HGV in them – personally I reckon that I can normally tell those occasions, because, well, there’s a dirty great HGV in front of me.

    The rider in the video also seemed to notice the presence of a large vehicle in the box and didn’t ride into it – it’s a fairly simple move that mitigates the risk, and means you don’t have to rely on someone else spotting you, or not.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    1536!!!! What was that all about?

    The almost complete lack of stopping power especially in the wet during that era I would imagine.

    Cheap heavy steel frames combined with heavy steel wheels and hopelessly inadequate brakes makes stopping safely rather more difficult.

    I suspect that there was also less tarmac roads and more cobblestone roads……..riding on wet cobblestone on a half a cwt steel bike with crap brakes and only cloth on your head for protection must have been a risky experience.

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    Possibly too many brown ales too.

    brooess
    Free Member

    The other 5% of the time, they have an HGV in them – personally I reckon that I can normally tell those occasions, because, well, there’s a dirty great HGV in front of me.

    What seems bleeding obvious to you and me, isn’t for newbie cyclists. Which is where training comes in. Commonsense isn’t that common unfortunately.

    imnotverygood
    Full Member

    I apologise for the rant but, honestly, I’ve had enough if this moany, whiny hipocrisy. If you want the motorists to drive well, then feel free to start showing them how it’s done. Ugh!!!

    Well. I have been cycling absolutely perfectly for the last 6 months. For some strange reason I see dozens of examples of bad driving every day. I don’t understand how that can still be happening.

    shermer75
    Free Member

    Well. I have been cycling absolutely perfectly for the last 6 months. For some strange reason I see dozens of examples of bad driving every day. I don’t understand how that can still be happening.

    Yeah, it’s a weird one that. It’s almost as if the entire world isn’t watching your every move and adjusting their behaviour accordingly

    wrightyson
    Free Member

    I work in construction and tipper trucks as they seemingly have been tagged within this post are the life blood of the industry. Various guises of lorry run on that 8 or 6 wheeled wheelbase from concrete lorries to actual tippers.
    The lads I have delivering to my sites all seem pretty competent and haven’t run over or killed anyone as I know of. Banning them from the roads is never going to happen as they genuinely are the life blood of the industry especially in very built up areas where say arisings can’t just be pushed to another area of the site.
    It’s surely got to be a programme of better education for cyclists and drivers alike and the use of modern technology.
    Balfours years ago introduced cameras/sensors on 360 machines after numerous deaths, these sensors cameras literally cut out the machine if someone was to encroach into the “swinging area” of the machine. Has it been adopted natinal by other companies ? Has it bollox, and I suppose it’s down to money as usual.

    fourbanger
    Free Member

    The principles I alluded to were that by following the principles used within HSAW and treating the highway as a workplace for Professional drivers the responsibility for other occupants would extend beyond the drivers to the managers, directors …and thence to the pockets of shareholders…

    Vicarious liability would cover this??

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 139 total)

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