Have your say on ambitious new cycle improvements

Residents are being asked to have their say on ambitious plans to make major cycling improvements to Hills Road and Huntingdon Road in Cambridge.

A film has been produced to help people visualise the plans, which include new facilites that have never been used in Cambridgeshire before.

Cambridgeshire County Council has launched a consultation on the proposals which are part of a £4.1 million investment in cycling in and around the city.

The Council wants to make it safer to cycle along these routes and encourage people to commute to work, college and school by bike. It is planning to create wider and safer cycleways, which could be segregated from other traffic as well as introducing a new type of bus stop to the city for the first time.

A series of road shows and events will be held in and around Cambridge, including a cyclists breakfast, to get people’s views on the proposals.

Currently there are around 2,800 journeys by bike on Huntingdon Road and around over 4,000 on Hills Road each day and these are set to increase substantially as the city grows. Since 2008 some 65 per cent of accidents on Huntingdon road involved cyclists while on Hills Road it is 55 per cent. The new improvements would make it safer for both cyclists and motorists.

On Hills Road a new cycle lane is proposed on both sides of the road between the junctions with Long Road and Cherry Hinton Road.

On Huntingdon Road a new cycle lane is proposed, city-bound between Girton corner and Oxford Road. This may be extended to run all the way into the city centre.

The Council is asking for views on three design options:

  • a segregated cycle lane where the lane is separated from traffic by a kerb (there are breaks in the kerb at junctions and driveways)
  • a raised cycle lane which is slightly above the road height but below the height of the pavement
  • another option which is a combination of the two different ideas

Both schemes include the creation of a new style of bus stop where the cycle lane continues behind the bus stop so cyclists can continue their journey without having to mix in with motor traffic, even when a bus is stationary.

This type of bus stop, as well as the new cycle lane, should also make journeys less stressful for car drivers who will have fewer overtaking cyclists to deal with.

Draft proposals for these stops will also look at safety measures for pedestrians to cross the cycle lane.

The plans, drawings and visuals of how the new road layout will look, together with a feedback form are online at: www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk

The proposals are going to be on display in Rock Road and Cambridge Central Libraries and at public events throughout the city including:

  • Thursday 6 March, St John the Evangelist Church, Hills Road, 5pm to 7.30pm
  • Wednesday 12 March, Girton Glebe School on 12th March 5pm to 7.30pm
  • Friday 14 March, Main Foyer, Addenbrooke’s, 11am to 2pm
  • Tuesday 18 March, St Augustines Hall, 5pm to 7pm
  • Monday 24 March, Foyer, The Kaetsu Centre, Huntingdon Rd, 5pm to 7pm,
  • Wednesday 26 March, The Perse School, Hills Road, 6.30pm to 8.30pm

You can also have your say by emailing the Transport Delivery Team at transport.delivery@cambridgeshire.gov.uk or by calling 01223 699906, or by writing to Transport Delivery Team, Box CC1211, Castle Court,  Castle Hill, Cambridge, CB3 0AP.

Cambridgeshire County Councillor Ian Bates, Cabinet Member for Growth and Planning said: “We have to be ambitious in our ideas to improve road use in the city and provide sustainable transport for a population set to increase by 28 per cent by 2031. We need local residents and commuters to have their say on these ideas, we want to improve transport for all in Cambridge and the best way to do this is to ask local people. Nothing has been decided yet – and it will not be until everyone has had a chance to see the ideas in full and given their views.”

The Council’s innovative plans are similar to schemes which have already been operating successfully in London, Brighton and European countries including Denmark, Germany and The Netherlands, which have received overwhelmingly positive feedback from users, and cycling, particularly amongst children, has substantially increased.

Both projects are being funded by the Council’s successful bid last year which secured £4.1 million from the Department for Transport’s Cycle City Ambition Fund. The so called GC3 (Greater Cambridge Cycling City) programme for Cambridgeshire has two key themes. The first is to provide good quality cycle links to business parks in South Cambridgeshire while the second is about providing segregated lanes on main arterial roads.

New cycle links to Granta Park and Babraham Research Campus are already well on the way to completion. 

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