Southern Rail and Thameslink have announced restrictions on the carriage of bicycles on their routes this Sunday due to the London to Brighton Cycle Ride taking place at the weekend.
In a series of identical tweets on their respective Twitter accounts, the two train operating companies confirmed that no bikes will be carried from the start of service on Sunday until noon that day.
Similar restrictions will apply for the rest of Sunday between Gatwick Airport and Brighton, and the companies have also warned that there is likely to be restricted space for bicycles on services on Saturday and Monday.
The companies have also advised people planning on travelling with their bikes to check the conditions on the carriage of bicycles.
The ride is one of several charity cycling events between London and Brighton each year, the best known of which is organised by the British Heart Foundation. First held in 1976, it attracts as many as 30,000 cyclists annually, for many of whom the challenge is the first time they have taken part in a mass participation event.
That event is cancelled this year due to the coronavirus pandemic, as it was in 2020, although an off-road version was successfully held earlier this month, raising more than £500,000 for the charity.
Sunday’s event, which is sold out, is organised by Skyline Events in partnership with DeLonghi and Great Ormond Street Hospital, and after consultation with the relevant authorities and local councils, some specific measures have been put in place.
Those include participants being requested to observe social distancing, a prepacked grab-and-go meal at the finish line rather than a mass lunch stop, and allocation of start times based on expected finish time to prevent overcrowding at Clapham Common and bunching along the route.
The capacity of the ride has also been reduced and participants are required to complete a health and safety questionnaire.
Unlike previous editions, there will be no event bar to have a celebratory drink at once over the finish line – although venues in Brighton will be open as usual of course.
On the event’s website, organisers said: “The last 15 months have been difficult for us all, but we’re more than aware of the devastating impact the pandemic has had on income for our charity partners.
“We feel a responsibility to do everything we can to ensure the event goes ahead in some capacity and help these vital causes to raise some much needed funds.
“Whilst it may look a bit different to normal, we’re pleased to have this opportunity in September, and are looking forward to sharing a very special day with as many of you as possible.”
Add new comment
17 comments
Presumably if someone turns up with a suitcase they'd not get turned away. So would a Rinko bag be a good way around this? i.e. one of these Fairmean Transfer bags as demonstrated here "The key to the cycling paradise in Japan" Obviously a bit late this year, but in general - anyone got any experience with something similar on UK railways?
Not in the UK, but in Switzerland you have to pay extra to take a bike on a train, unless it's in a bag/box, which then means it counts as luggage. So, all we used to do was get a bin bag, which is very simple to roll up into a ball in your backpack, and wrap it roughly around the bike to take it on for free.
If you can't join 'em, beat 'em!
Am i misunderstanding this - how is this going to impact most of the riders on the event? The restriction only lasts till noon so won't it only affect fast finishers? Sorry if I'm being thick but what does them doing this achieve?
It says restrictions remain between Brighton and Gatwick for the rest of the day as well
So the first set of restrictions are to stop you getting a train up to London for the start (where you could be coming from anywhere on the network) and the second to stop you getting the train away from Brighton after.
Right, that explains it. How are most people going to get home? I don't imagine the bulk of those on this ride can manage the return trip. Its for a f*****g heart charity. Why put people off doing it? Really grating.
Probably by being picked up by car - which is a really sustainable and environmentally friendly solution.
Superb - flashback to 2012 Olympic road race, I was very seriously ill at the time and no way could have ridden down to Box Hill - five miles was a challenge - but no worries, I'll shove the bike on a train to Box Hill & Westhumble and watch the lads go by...only to find "Bikes are not permitted on all trains serving any Olympic venue for the duration of the Games." Let's celebrate sport...no not that sport, obvs...
I look forward to the 'No dinosaurs, scuba divers or pantomime horses permitted' announcement next time the London Marathon is held.
I think train companies are saying they are not part of any Active Travel plans or strategy and that they do not want or should get any related funding.
So on busy days trains will also be cancelled so as to avoid carrying people. Did I get that right?
Yet another example of how privatised infrastructure cannot serve public goals. The logical thing to do would be to run a special schedule with a lot more trains to serve the event....instead of basically forcing everyone to DRIVE there.
It's a Sunday, space in the timetable and spare trains in the depot.
Any sensible business would see an opertunity (at a time because of the pandemic of reduced income through lower number of fares) to run a few specials, with prebooking and even charging a fee for the bikes. Bit of advertising, and working with the organisers, watch the cash roll in. Year after year too...
Lack of joined up thinking.
theres nothing stopping the event organisers, or even private groups chartering their own train service to fill the gap, if its felt theres such easy money to be made from it.
I thought that the whole idea of having a comprehensive public service was that people didn't need to do such things.
In addition to the fact that public transport should, during a climate emergency at least, enable people to get where they need to go without using inefficient and deleterious methods.
And yes, I believe that attending mass cultural and social events is a public need, not a nice to have.
Fundamentally trains just shifting carriages of air around instead of passengers,for a one off yearly event is actually worse for a climate emergency, because 364 days of the year you arent carrying 1000s of cyclists back from Brighton all the time and so our trains arent built to cope with those large volumes of cyclists anymore because its deemed wasteful of space, if they even ever were to begin with. Even when Southern provided trains for this people complained they didnt fulfil their need, didnt stop exactly where they wanted etc etc.
So I'd far rather see a train carry 10 passengers that have ditched their cars for the day than 10 cyclists who have just ridden a cycling sportive, as public transport balances everyones needs, it's not there as some kind of service tailored just to our own particular needs at the time.
As I say if there is a market for it, it's possible to charter trains to do it, that no one ever does that, but simply complains about the situation ultimately means nothing will change.
Bit of a false dichotomy. In my industry we vary our schedules, capacity and offering for public events, holidays, time of year, even weather, and that's just internet shopping FFS. There's really no reason why the trains can't or shouldn't do the same.
Sunday service is usually fairly empty (certainly on my mainline) so refusing to allow people with bikes is actually ensuring that trains are only moving air, on that day at least.
Isn't public transport just super!