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City's Busiest Cycling Route About to get Safer

Saturday 26 June 2010, 6:22PM

By Wellington City Council

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WELLINGTON CITY

A new clearway will operate on part of Thorndon Quay from next Monday (28 June) to make the city's busiest commuter cycling route safer.

The clearway, between Tinakori Road and Mulgrave Street, will operate Monday to Friday, 7am-9am. This will give city-bound cyclists more space to ride and reduce the risk of them being hit by vehicles.

Motorists will still be able to use parking spaces on the other side of Thorndon Quay during the morning peak. However, there will be no parking on the city-bound side until after 9am, with the exception of a five-minute park outside the bakery and a loading zone for early morning customers who need to pick up supplies from City Timber and Simply Steel. A new pedestrian crossing will be going in near the Bordeaux Bakery by the end of August.

The Council's Transport Portfolio Leader, Mayor Kerry Prendergast, says the changes will improve one of the city's busiest and most hazardous commuter cycling routes.

"It's very heartening to see that the number of cyclists regularly using this route at peak times has grown from 75 to nearly 300 an hour in the past 10 years. But we need to make it safer because of the worrying increase in the number of crashes involving cyclists āā‚¬" up from an average of one to six a year.

"The vast majority of the reported crashes occur between 7 and 9am in a southbound direction and involve drivers turning into parking spaces and driveways, so we are confident these changes will make a difference."

Over the next five to seven years, Mayor Prendergast says the Council is also proposing to develop a new shared off-road route from Kaiwharawhara to the city via Aotea and Waterloo quays and the waterfront. The route would ultimately form part of the Great Harbour Way āā‚¬" a planned cycle and walkway around Wellington Harbour.

The Council asked local businesses and others to comment on the Thorndon Quay changes in March and received strong support for the plan. Only nine of the 163 submissions opposed all or some of the changes and most objections related to changes proposed to parking restriction times on some parking spaces.