• 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

Cycling Barefoot On Festival Way (with logo)

19 August 2016

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
  • RSS Feed

Latest Posts

  • All the consultations!
  • Bristol Cycling Campaign celebrates record-breaking year
  • More consultations now open for street transformations
  • Improvement consultations now open for three streets in Bristol
  • Don’t Blow it Bristol!

Featured – selection of key articles

  • A Health and Safety Perspective of Cycling Safety +

    When thinking about reducing risk on our roads and Road Danger Reduction, it's helpful to draw from the experience of engineering and construction. These used to be highly dangerous occupations but years of steady focus on eliminating risk have established a culture that tolerates zero casualties. What might we learn if we were to take a 'Vision Zero' approach to danger on our roads? An interesting blog by Alistair Marshall A Health and Safety Perspective… Read More
  • A Modest Proposal #4: Clanage Road Roundabout and the Festival Way +

    If you want to scare yourself rigid, pop along to Clanage Road roundabout on any weekday in term time at 3.15pm. That's the time that 1,500 kids pour out of Ashton Park School and onto the fast busy roundabout on the A369. This is a key hub on the F11 Inner Orbital Cycling Freeway in the BCyC strategic cycle network and close to F8 Festival Way Quietway. BCyC members have been working with local residents… Read More
  • A Modest Proposal #5: The Bear Pit / St James Barton Roundabout +

    St James Barton roundabout remains among the worst in Bristol for cyclists. This is despite the sterling work of The Bearpit Improvement Group and the recently completed £1million scheme to provde a route around the inner edge of the roundabout at street level for pedestrians and cyclists. We hope this already outdated scheme will be the last time huge budgets will be spent forcing cycles to share busy spaces with pedestrians (see BCyC Policy on… 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
  • 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
  • A Modest Proposal #2: Bristol Promenades Routes +

    We've been given agreement to share with you some plans that we have been helping with for Promenade Routes in Bristol. These are a set of proposals by John Grimshaw to enhance all of Bristol’s waterside quays, towpaths and walkways to create popular promenades to further promote walking and cycling in the area. Bristol’s riversides and docks have long been a popular place to cycle because they are attractive, central and flat. This project aims… Read More
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
› ‹
© 2015 - 2020 Bristol Cycling Campaign
Terms & conditions | FAQ | Join us | Log in/out | Contact