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"Danger" cycle lane to be resurfaced after cyclist's crash

Darlington Borough Council found parts of the infrastructure "not to be of the required standard"...

A cycle lane branded a "danger" after a cyclist was left unconscious with a host of injuries is to be resurfaced after the council deemed it "not to be of the required standard" and in need of repair.

The Northern Echo reports Darlington Borough Council is to appoint a contractor to resurface the infrastructure between Milbank Road and Greenbank Road, with a new material to be used and white lines to be repainted.

The red surface material seen in images released by the council is just an impression, the authority confirmed, and it is not known if the final cycle lane will be bright red.

The local paper heard from Graham Webster, who called the route a "danger" after suffering a crash which has prompted the council to now take action, a fall which left the local cyclist unconscious and with injuries to his neck, shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip and knee.

In hospital he was told that staff had treated other riders who had fallen on the same cycle lane, which has raised concrete edges separating the route from traffic, something Mr Webster called "an inherent danger from a cyclist's perspective in an environment supposedly meant to the protect them".

"As a highly experienced cyclist of some 40 plus years and having cycled in all corners of the globe I have never encountered such a dangerous design of cycle lane," he said.

"Whilst cycling south east along Woodland Road, just before the Hollyhurst Road junction and opposite St Teresa's Hospice, I was the victim of an accident which caused me to fall from my bike and left me lying unconscious in the road.

"The cause of the accident was my wheels catching the edge of the raised concrete kerb edge which separates the cycle lane and the road lane tarmac levels. There were no warning signs to highlight the change of surface height and the kerb looks like a flat painted line as you approach it dead ahead.

"The kerb edge is hidden as a cyclist due to the position you ride on the road, which effectively means you are almost on top of the kerb edge which from this position is very difficult to spot. Either a different colour tarmac and or warning signs to me are the obvious improvement."

The work is to be done overnight, with surfacing and lining work to take six nights, starting on Monday 31 July.

"We recognise that the scheme caused inconvenience during the construction phase, but it is necessary for the contractors to return to put right the issues that have been identified," a spokesperson from the council said.

"We are trying to minimise disruption by night time working but some works are required ahead of these night shifts and this has to be during the day."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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5 comments

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Jippily | 1 year ago
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I've walked down this route and there are problems with it, such as junction treatment, interaction with buses, and it being stop start. However, apart from that it is a properly designed stepped cycle way. These are relatively common and don't seem to have caused issues in other areas.

I'd be interested to see what exactly the council will change in this resurfacing, but I think it's quite likely this cyclist just hadn't encountered a stepped cycle lane before and wasn't paying much attention. He said there's no indication of the difference in levels, but in my opinion it's very obvious.

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chrisonabike replied to Jippily | 1 year ago
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Thanks for the local report.

the victim wrote:

There were no warning signs to highlight the change of surface height and the kerb looks like a flat painted line as you approach it dead ahead

Yes, we heard the same thing about the "optical illusion" cycle lane that pedestrians were tripping over in a story a few weeks back.

*If* this one is similar to Dutch designs (I don't know the detail) then it sounds like it's just unfamiliarity. People in the UK just expecting "infra" to be paint...

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
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Of course, "gold standard" would be "forgiving kerbs" on both sides of a cycle path (also means the usable width is maximised).

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eburtthebike | 1 year ago
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"We recognise that the scheme caused inconvenience during the construction phase, but it is necessary for the contractors to return to put right the issues that have been identified," a spokesperson from the council said."

So, either the coucil specified a dangerous cycle facility, or the contractor didn't follow the specification: which was it?

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muhasib replied to eburtthebike | 1 year ago
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'Darlington Borough Council said the cycle lane was completed to national standards'

Sounds like DBC don't think they have anything to apologise for other than the inconvenience during the construction.

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