Skip to main content

New junction on London’s Cycle Superhighway offers safety measures for cyclists

Britain’s first junction designed to avoid cyclists being hit by left-turning traffic is unveiled today, the beginning of a new wave of such junctions on London’s busiest main roads. Cyclists and turning motor traffic will move in separate phases, with left-turning vehicles held back to allow cyclists to move without risk, and cyclists held when vehicles are turning left. There will also be a new ‘two-stage right turn’ to let cyclists make right turns in safety. For straight-ahead traffic, early-release
August 25, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Britain’s first junction designed to avoid cyclists being hit by left-turning traffic is unveiled today, the beginning of a new wave of such junctions on London’s busiest main roads.

Cyclists and turning motor traffic will move in separate phases, with left-turning vehicles held back to allow cyclists to move without risk, and cyclists held when vehicles are turning left. There will also be a new ‘two-stage right turn’ to let cyclists make right turns in safety. For straight-ahead traffic, early-release traffic lights will give cyclists a head start.

These innovations aim to significantly cut the cyclist casualty rate. Around 85 per cent of cyclist accidents happen at junctions, mostly involving turning traffic.

The new junction, on the upgraded Cycle Superhighway 2 at Whitechapel Road and Cambridge Heath Road, will be the template for junctions to be introduced across London’s main road network in future. These will be at smaller locations than the 33 biggest and most complicated interchanges being improved under the Mayor’s “Better Junctions” programme. The junction unveiled today is not one of the 33 Better Junctions locations.

Cycle Superhighway 2, part of wider plans by the Mayor and 1466 Transport for London (TfL) to improve cycling safety, will deliver a world-class substantially segregated cycle route between Aldgate and Bow Roundabout in east London. Once complete, by early next year, 11 major junctions along the route of Cycle Superhighway 2 alone will involve a mixture of these innovative safety measures, keeping cyclists separate from other traffic.

TfL began constructing the upgraded Cycle Superhighway 2 in February 2015 and now, just six months later, almost half of the work is already complete. Once finished, the vast majority of the route will be separated with a kerb, which will keep cyclists away from traffic. Where there is less space for kerbed segregation, cyclists will be separated from traffic by pioneering highly-visible traffic ‘wands’ - regularly spaced flexible poles that clearly define the cycle track. Later this year, TfL will also begin work on pedestrian improvements at Bow Interchange, providing new pedestrian crossing facilities at the roundabout, making it easier to cross from east to west and north to south.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bristol trials new cycle safety technology
    June 9, 2014
    As part of an ongoing trial funded by five West of England local authorities, UK bus operator First West of England will for the first time be test driving state-of-the-art cycle safety technology on two of its buses on the busy Gloucester Road route in the city of Bristol. Developed by Fusion Processing, CycleEye technology aims to reduce the growing number of cyclist collisions and casualties across the country involving large commercial vehicles. CycleEye is fitted to the side of the vehicle and
  • Data crunching ‘can prevent cars crashing’
    March 25, 2013
    Having already cut traffic collisions resulting in injuries and deaths by nearly forty per cent in five years by analysing patterns from data it has collected, the city of Edmonton, Canada, is using predictive technologies to increase road safety even more. The city’s Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) has installed as many as 200 digital signs as just one element of an innovative traffic safety program that has dramatically reduced vehicle collisions in the Edmonton region since OTS launched in late 2006. Unde
  • 7,000 TfL staff furloughed today
    April 27, 2020
    Transport for London (TfL)’s main source of income “has almost disappeared”.
  • More than half of UK’s new cars sold with autonomous safety tech
    April 4, 2016
    Self driving cars may seem years away, but more than 1.5 million UK motorists a year now leave showrooms in cars featuring self-activating safety systems, according to analysis revealed by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

    Data from SMMT and JATO Dynamics shows that more than half of new cars registered in 2015 were fitted with safety-enhancing collision warning systems, with other technologies such as adaptive cruise control, autonomous emergency braking and blind spot monitoring also surging in popularity.