It's all about bikes this week. Beyonce was spotted tootling around Dublin on two wheels, while Boris Johnson announced that £111 million was to be invested in improving and encouraging cycling in London. Elsewhere in the capital 300 climate campaigning cyclists created a roadblock on Westminster Bridge. And what's more next week is National Bike Week.
Although her boyfriend Jay Z's backstage requirements were recently revealed as including a gas guzzling Maybach limo, Beyonce it would appear prefers a much more modest form of transport. Prior to her headline show at Dublin Arena last week, the Destiny's Child star was papped pedalling around the Irish capital. Reports that her next single will be entitled 'Crazy in Lycra' remain unconfirmed.
London Mayor, Boris Johnson, was also photographed extolling the virtues of pedal power last week. The Mayor, speaking at a press conference in Trafalgar Square, kick started his “cycling revolution in London” with news that a cool £111m will go towards delivering 66,000 new cycle parking spaces, including 138 at Euston Station, and 12 new ‘cycle super-highways’ by 2012. The whopping 10-figure investment will also fund the long awaited London Cycle Hire Scheme that will see 400 bike docking stations, housing over 6,000 cycles, spring up across Zone 1 by the tail end of 2010. Bikes will be available to hire by the half hour and hour and will apparently be priced at next to nothing to encourage a quick take up. According to Transport for London, cycling in London is up by nine percent on last year, with around 545,000 bicycle trips being made each day so it looks like this ambitious scheme may not even meet the demand.
And speaking of demands, over 300 cyclists downed frame and forks on Westminster Bridge on Monday (1st June) to protest at the Government’s plan to start a programme of building coal fired power stations even though the last of these eco-monsters was built some 30 years ago. The Evening Standard reported that traffic was blocked at Piccadilly Circus, Shaftesbury Avenue and Oxford Street before the ‘Climate Rush’ group began their sit-in. A police source said they allowed activists to close the bridge as using force to remove them would be “disproportionate when viewed against the behaviour, mood and make-up of the crowd”. Pity the coppers didn’t take that approach at the G20 marches back in April. There again, maybe the boys in blue were simply terrified by an army of shorthaired women armed with bike pumps. Sorry, enough of my fantasies.
Anyhow, with all of this two-wheeled tom foolery going on it seems like there couldn’t be a better time to launch National Bike Week, which begins on Saturday 13th June. Activities include a midnight cycling trip and bike rides around hidden London. Find out more at tfl.gov.uk. Hopefully see you there.
1 Comments.
Richard Aspden
Posted 08/07/2009