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Old December 5th 18, 01:34 AM posted to uk.rec.cycling
JNugent[_10_]
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Posts: 350
Default "councils could not "babysit everyone on a bike or urge them toslow down"

On 04/12/2018 18:32, JNugent wrote:
On 04/12/2018 16:32, Simon Jester wrote:
On Monday, December 3, 2018 at 10:13:52 PM UTC, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2018 21:33, MrCheerful wrote:

****ed cyclist on an unlit footpath at midnight, no helmet.Â*Â* Family
try
to blame the council for their ****wit's death from head injuries.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-46433610

QUOTE:
"The Loke" is a byway for pedestrians but Mr Warren's father said they
had been told by locals that it was used regularly by cyclists.
ENDQUOTE

Gerraway!

It must be the only pedestrian footway in the country used by cyclists.

What are the chances, eh?


Is there a street view image of the entrance to this 'byway for
pedestrians'?
Since it is not beside a carriageway then, absent a TRO prohibiting
cycling, it is fair game.


You can easily find it on Google Streetview.

Good luck trying to find a sign encouraging cyclists to negotiate a
flight of concrete stairs, up or down.


If you're interested, I think this is it:

/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sJVDkaYo3gQksvl3fwaUeUQ!2e0!7i1 3312!8i6656?hl=en

It looks like the northern end of a footpath (with v=at least one
branch) linking Ranworth Road to Dereham Road.

It's a modern-ish housing estate in a fairly flat part of the country,
but there nevertheless does seem to be quite an incline in the immediate
area. The site treatment reminds me of a place not far from where I was
brought up (all demolished now) where the site sloped so much (with the
effect intensidied by the need to cut terraces for housing) that the
Victorian builders laid out several streets linked to others (at one end
at least) only by steep stone and brick outdoor staircases.
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