• Get Involved
  • News
      • Back
      • Featured Key articles
      • Forums Have your say
  • Campaigns
      • Back
      • Routes Space for Cycling on roads
      • Neighbourhoods Liveable, low traffic streets
          • Back
          • Bath & NE Somerset
          • Bristol
          • North Somerset
          • South Gloucestershire
      • Influence Vision and political leadership
      • Cycling for All Safe and inclusive
      • Road Justice Enforcement & investigations
      • Consultations Speaking up for cycling
  • Activities
      • Back
      • Diary
      • Suggest a change
      • Bristol Bike Shops
      • Route Planner
      • Rides
  • About us
      • Back
      • FAQ
      • Useful Information
      • Contact Us
      • Log In/Out

Site of Fishponds Railway Station (Author : Weirdoldhattie)

30 October 2012

Site of Fishponds Railway Station (Author : Weirdoldhattie)

Comments

Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Support Bristol Cycling!
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Latest Posts

  • Bristol Cycling Cycle Hangars Project
  • Could you be Bristol’s Bicycle Mayor?
  • Bristol Parents for School Streets
  • Cycle hangers, Liveable Neighbourhoods, elections
  • Bristol to Bath Railway Path Safety

Featured – selection of key articles

  • A Modest Proposal #1: Pedestrianise Clifton Triangle +

    One of the next actions as part of our Freedom to Ride campaign is to start to flesh out our proposed Bristol Cycling Network that we are working on with Bristol City Council. We are looking at some specific issues and routes that need addressing in order to generate debate and come up with some plans that can be progressed with the Council so that we have initial plans for as and when further funding… Read More
  • A Modest Proposal #8: Jamaica St cycleway +

    Every cyclist in Bristol will have their own strategy for coping with the James Barton roundabout, one of the worst in Bristol and the subject of our Modest Proposal #5: The Bear Pit / St James Barton Roundabout. Particularly as the Gloucester Road is one of the busiest cycling routes in the city, with its own Modest Proposal #6; Eight to Eighty cycling on Gloucester Road. Most of us make use of Jamaica Street, but it… Read More
  • Cycling vs the Electric Car +

    Electric vehicles have received a lot of press over the past few months. This furore has even led some to suggest that EVs are more efficient than food powered humans riding bicycles. So we at Bristol Cycling have put together an unapologetically technical article in an attempt to shed some light on this. Why does energy matter? For starters, energy, whether it is petrol, electricity or food costs money. We are also burning our way… Read More
  • Knowing where to spend money +

    There is much insight to be gained from data, given the right perspective. One of the most alarming figures is that 129,000 people drive to work in the city of Bristol. Of those, 57,603 (44.6%) live within a 20 minute, 5km, bicycle ride to work. It's worth pausing to let that sink in. Nearly half of Bristol commuter drivers live within a 20 minute bicycle ride to work. Adam Reynolds of CycleBath has emerged from… Read More
  • Bristol Cycling Network +

    Bristol Cycling Campaign has produced a concise strategy for cycling in Bristol. This sets out how we will achieve Space for Cycling. The strategy is affordable, maintaining current spending levels of £16 per head of population per year, and can be delivered in just 12 years for a total of £109m. We have mapped out the network of strategic routes shown here that connect every neighbourhood. These can also be seen in an innovative 'Top… Read More
  • Induced Traffic and Traffic Evaporation +

    The recent debate on the proposed Callington "Relief" Road has brought the concept of "induced traffic" back into the limelight. And also the the related and much neglected evidence for "reduced traffic", or the delightful concept of "traffic evaporation". So what do these terms mean? Induced Traffic As car ownership and use have increased over the past 30 years the reaction to the pressure created by additional traffic demand has often been to increase the… Read More
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
› ‹
© 2015 - 2020 Bristol Cycling Campaign
Terms & conditions | FAQ | Join us | Log in/out | Contact