Caro - through the magic of Google Earth and Google Street View I've found the bridge you're talking about and had a wee virtual bike-ride over it to see hwat it might be like.
My considered opinion? It's really badly designed and your comments about the design seem completely well founded.
1> The cycle lane on the left side of the bridge is far too narrow.
The painted on "separation" between it and the left hand lane of the road might help but it's not enough - especially considering the very wide pavement.
2> The way the cycle lane ends with dumping cyclists onto the pavement is unsafe for pedestrians and unsafe for cyclsts who then need to re-join the road.
3> The advance stop line for cyclists is very badly thought out.
My solution:
Widen the bike lane on the left side of the road. The lanes already look too narrow so this would nesessarily mean the loss of a lane or a narrower footpath. I believe the latter is the better solution.
Change the end of the bike lane so it ends on the road, not the pavement.
Extend the green advance stop section across all 5 lanes.
The result I'd see here is this...
The cycle lane itself would be far safer.
Cyclists turning left wouldn't have to dismount or ride on the pavement and could continue riding on the road just like they should be. The advance stop would prevent this causing problems for cars turning left.
Cyclists riding straight on and right would have a safe route to the bit of road they need when the lights turn red.
Cyclists riding straight ahead and right could also navigate across to the correct lane while crossing the bridge and would be able to position themselves in the middle lane to take up the correct road position on Oswald Street.
Other than the safer cycle lane (if they were using it, and if turning right I suspect I would not) cyclists turning right would be unaffected by the changes.
Another bonus would be preventing the current situation where a car in the middle lane is positioned alongside cyclists in the other straight-on lane, something that currently prevents cyclists from crossing to the proper road position after the junction.
You are quite right about the layout of that junction and Oswald Street leaving cyclists in between lanes 2 and 3 and I agree that it isn't the safest of setups.
I still believe advanced stop boxes are a good thing, and cycling on routes that alternate randomly between having the boxes or not- I get to try my hand at both on a regular basis. They feel far safer when there is a box than when there's not and in any case someone is going to have to pass the cyclist either way - even if not the car at the front of the line waiting at a red light.
It looks like a difficult road to cycle anyway - but the inadequate cycle lane and badly thought out advance stop certainly won't be making things any easier.
In fact, the more I think about that layout, the worse it seems.
How's that for a cyclists perspective?
My considered opinion? It's really badly designed and your comments about the design seem completely well founded.
1> The cycle lane on the left side of the bridge is far too narrow.
The painted on "separation" between it and the left hand lane of the road might help but it's not enough - especially considering the very wide pavement.
2> The way the cycle lane ends with dumping cyclists onto the pavement is unsafe for pedestrians and unsafe for cyclsts who then need to re-join the road.
3> The advance stop line for cyclists is very badly thought out.
My solution:
Widen the bike lane on the left side of the road. The lanes already look too narrow so this would nesessarily mean the loss of a lane or a narrower footpath. I believe the latter is the better solution.
Change the end of the bike lane so it ends on the road, not the pavement.
Extend the green advance stop section across all 5 lanes.
The result I'd see here is this...
The cycle lane itself would be far safer.
Cyclists turning left wouldn't have to dismount or ride on the pavement and could continue riding on the road just like they should be. The advance stop would prevent this causing problems for cars turning left.
Cyclists riding straight on and right would have a safe route to the bit of road they need when the lights turn red.
Cyclists riding straight ahead and right could also navigate across to the correct lane while crossing the bridge and would be able to position themselves in the middle lane to take up the correct road position on Oswald Street.
Other than the safer cycle lane (if they were using it, and if turning right I suspect I would not) cyclists turning right would be unaffected by the changes.
Another bonus would be preventing the current situation where a car in the middle lane is positioned alongside cyclists in the other straight-on lane, something that currently prevents cyclists from crossing to the proper road position after the junction.
You are quite right about the layout of that junction and Oswald Street leaving cyclists in between lanes 2 and 3 and I agree that it isn't the safest of setups.
I still believe advanced stop boxes are a good thing, and cycling on routes that alternate randomly between having the boxes or not- I get to try my hand at both on a regular basis. They feel far safer when there is a box than when there's not and in any case someone is going to have to pass the cyclist either way - even if not the car at the front of the line waiting at a red light.
It looks like a difficult road to cycle anyway - but the inadequate cycle lane and badly thought out advance stop certainly won't be making things any easier.
In fact, the more I think about that layout, the worse it seems.
How's that for a cyclists perspective?
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