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Cyclists given the green light to ride in wrong direction down one-way streets
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04 June 2008
Cyclists will be permitted to ride the wrong way up one-way streets to encourage more people to give up their cars.
New signs will advise cyclists where they are allowed to cut through and avoid the long circulatory one-way routes motor vehicles must take.
Road surfaces will not be changed and there will be no dividing line between cyclists and oncoming vehicles - instead they will be left to navigate their own paths.
The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London is testing two-way access for cyclists on several residential roads with the scheme set to be extended across the district if there is no increase in collisions.
Conservative leader David Cameron was caught cycling the wrong way up a one-way street in March
The changes have been introduced partly because hundreds of cyclists were found to be regularly flouting the rules of roads.
Conservative leader David Cameron was photographed taking a detour up the one-way Dawson Place in Kensington in March.
Kensington and Chelsea will implement the changes by replacing no-entry signs with 'no motor vehicle' signs.
The council's Daniel Moylan said: 'If this is what cyclists want to do and they are able do it safely, then we see it as our responsibility to adapt the legal position to allow them to do it legally.
'We are recognising the reality that cyclists prefer to take the shortest route through quieter streets. The alternative of having a policeman standing on the road to catch cyclists breaking the rules would be foolish and unworkable.'
Mr Moylan said he would lobby the Department of Transport to alter its rules to allow no-entry signs to be adapted with the words 'except cyclists'. Currently the council will have to use blue signs indicating bicycles are permitted to travel, with the danger that they could be misinterpreted.
He added: 'Cyclists are offered very little in terms of safety and convenience. I hope that our trial will encourage other boroughs and as a result cyclists will be much freer to travel around.
'It is absurd that we are being forced to put up signs showing flying motorbikes which are much less well understood and may result in more drivers disobeying them.'
Roger Geffen, policy manager of the Cyclists' Touring Club, welcomed the scheme, saying it was unfair to force cyclists to comply with one-way systems designed to slow down or divert motorised traffic.
He said: 'The alternative to cycling the wrong way down a one-way street is often to use a much less safe busy road.'
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