RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Andy’

Bristol adopts Paris-style bike scheme

On a rainy morning, few takers for country’s first citywide ride-and-go plan

It’s a miserable morning in the centre of Bristol. The rain is tipping down and only a halfwit would think of hiring a bike in this weather. So count me in.

Ride-and-go cycle schemes are a familiar part of the cityscape on mainland Europe. Barcelona, Amsterdam, Paris and Berlin all have well-established cycle networks, but somehow Britain has always rather lagged behind.

There are small local schemes in Southport, Cardiff, Hammersmith and Fulham, in London, and only yesterday Blackpool’s opened for business. But the closest we have to a whole-city scheme is in Bristol – Britain’s first designated Cycle City – where Hourbike operates with some support from the council.

The deal is straightforward. You register for a one-off fee of £10 and for that you get a code that lets you turn up to one of the cycle hubs and ride a bike. The first half-hour is free, any time over that works out at about £1 a hour (the idea is to undercut local car parking charges) and you can return the bike to any of the hubs dotted around the city.

Through the drizzle, I punch in the code, the electromagnetic lock is released and I have control of Daniel. The bikes all have names which are cuter than the cycles themselves because they are on the streets 24/7 and the idea is to make them solid and anonymous so that people don’t nick them.

So Daniel and I are ready but where to go for a test cycle? There are three other hubs in the centre and a couple more on the edge of the city near the University of the West of England, but I’ve no idea exactly where as there isn’t a map. Never mind. Andy, the street cleaner, should be able to help out. “There’s one outside the Royal Infirmary,” he says, “but I can’t say I’ve seen anyone using the bikes at either place.” Are you round this way often? “Every day”.

So I head off to hospital and soon discover another reason – apart from the weather – why no else is on a hire bike: it’s almost impossible to go anywhere in Bristol without going up a hill (I wonder if I’ll see any locals with colossal Tour de France-style muscled thighs). At the infirmary there’s a couple of bikes corralled at the hub, but still no sign of riders. Jim, a hospital technician, says he has never seen one.

There’s a bus stop next to the hub and no sign of a bus. Jo has been waiting for at least 10 minutes. Would she fancy a go on a bike? “It sounds like a good idea,” she says, “but I don’t think so.”

But it’s all downhill from here. “Maybe another time.”

I cycle round aimlessly for a while longer looking for another Hourbike but then reckon enough’s enough and tie Danny up for the day and head home.

It’s still early days. There are large parts of the city that still aren’t covered, though the bigger problem is winning punters’ hearts and minds. Tim Caswell, the managing director of Hourbike, which started the Bristol scheme earlier this year, refuses to be discouraged. “We’ve got about 300 people registered so far,” he says. “And with the help of the council we’re looking to increase the number of hubs and bikes so we’ve got most of the city covered. This is the way forward and we are committed to it.”

Getting it right is easier said than done. You can’t really pilot them by sticking a couple of bikes in the centre of town and hoping for the best, because people won’t see the point. It’s only when the full infrastructure is in place that it works. So you’ve got to be prepared to invest – and so far, especially with local government feeling the pinch, councils have tended to play safe by doing nothing.

“There’s a tendency to think there’s only one model,” said Phillip Darnton, who chairs Cycling England, an independent body set up by the government to promote pedal power. “Not everything has to be on the scale of the Paris Velib or TfL’s proposals for London. These are both large schemes aimed at significantly reducing commuter congestion: towns such as Southport, which has also just opened a cycle-hire scheme, are looking more to recreate the ambience of the seaside town, so they need something much less intensive.”

Even so, Britain does not have the best track record when it comes to promoting cycling. A bike hire scheme in Cheltenham has just closed and the London mayor, Boris Johnson, has managed to get on the wrong side of several councils with his plan to tear up several of their car parking bays to install cycle hubs and rob them of some revenue – so there’s still a lot of politicking to be done before London comes on stream.

So how come we’re so rubbish at cycle schemes and mainland Europe has been so successful? “It’s partly cultural,” said Marie, a Paris resident. “Cycling is seen as normal in France, whereas in Britain it’s often more about macho types in Lycra. But it’s also because people are less afraid of cycling in Paris because our drivers are so much better than yours.” Now there’s a thought.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Andy Ostroy: The Passing of Walter Cronkite

The year was 1983. I was a boy from Queens, NY, in the final leg of earning a Journalism degree. Like so many other…

Andy Borowitz: God Orders Sanford to Stop Putting Words in His Mouth

One day after embattled South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford claimed that God was trying to make him a better person, the Almighty held a rare press conference to demand that Sanford “stop putting words in My mouth.”

Andy Worthington: Predictable Chaos As Guantanamo Trials Resume

At Guantánamo this week, the Military Commission trial system convened for only the second time since President Obama announced a four-month freeze on all proceedings…

Andy Borowitz: Goldman Sachs in Talks to Acquire Treasury Department

According to a Goldman spokesperson, the merger between Goldman and the Treasury Department is “a good fit” because “they’re in the business of printing money and so are we.”

Andy Plesser: Obama Campaign’s Video Strategist: Forget Viral, It’s About Targeted Impact

I caught up with Max at the Personal Democracy Forum after his session on video and the Obama campaign. This is one of most profound and illuminating interviews I have had the privilege to share.

Phil Bronstein: Wise Latina, Meet Ricky Ricardo…

Ricky Ricardo always got blindsided, then hustled by his ditzy wife. All she needed to do was apologize and maybe cry a little. Neither Sotomayor nor Senator Coburn seem like they’ll be doing any weeping.

The Bernanke Market: Andy Kessler’s WSJ Op-Ed

Just about every policy move to right the U.S. economy after the subprime sinking of the banking system has been a bust. We saved Bear Stearns. We let Lehman Brothers go. We forced Merrill Lynch, Wachovia and Washington Mutual into the hands o…

Andy Plesser: VIDEO: Obama Campaign Video Was a “Collective Narrative of Hope”

Max Harper, a 27-year old community organizer and filmmaker was a key member of the presidential campaign of Barack Obama who created numerous campaign…

Andy Worthington: Will Eric Holder Be The Anti-Torture Hero?

In an important article for Newsweek, “Independent’s Day,” Daniel Klaidman manages not only to present a convincingly intimate and sympathetic first-hand portrait of Eric Holder,…

Andy Borowitz: Ensign Favors Stimulus of his Package

Senator John Ensign (R-Nev) broke with his fellow Republicans today, telling reporters in Washington that he favors additional stimulus of his package. “I misread my…

Ashes live – England v Australia

First Ashes Test, Cardiff, day five:
England v Australia

LIVE TEXT COMMENTARY (all times BST)

By Ben Dirs

606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on the action

e-mail tms@bbc.co.uk (with ‘For Ben Dirs’ in the subject), text 81111 (with "CRICKET" as the first word) or use 606. (Not all contributions can be used)

ENGLAND SECOND INNINGS

1040: Personally, I’m plumping for all out shortly after tea. And the only possible way England can escape this game without any mental scars is if they’re only five or six wickets down at stumps, with a couple of tons in the scorebook. Replay of Mark Butcher’s 173 not out at Headingley in 2001 on the telly, my God we could do with another one of those – but who’s going to hold their hand up today"Waiting for this morning’s action is a little like those days of watching Dr Who as a kid – you know it’s going to be scary, and you know those nasty creatures are about to try to destroy the good guys to continue their quest and for world domination, but you just have to watch anyway."
Ian, hiding behind the sofa in Muscat, in the TMS inbox "Why are we surprised at how England played Nine of this 11 participated in the last whitewash series Down Under…"
Andy in Aberystwyth in the TMS inbox "England are up the Taff without a paddle in this one, all over by tea me thinks."
Peter in the TMS inbox1033: Yep, Freddie, you’ve just got to bat out the day… simple as that mate…"We’ve got good players, we’ve just got to bat out today. We’re an attacking side and we’ve got to play our natural game, we can’t just play for a draw. It’s going to take someone to get a hundred, or maybe a couple of us, to save the day."
England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff
BBC Sport’s Tom Fordyce on Twitter:"Sunshine in Cardiff. Shadows all over the place. If anything’s going to save England, it’ll be partnerships not precipitation." "What depresses me so much about this gutless England Display is what appears to be the total lack of desire to win from the England team. This is a very average Australian team but as usual they bring it to the opposition hard despite their limited talents."
CourageDirectors
Tom Fordyce’s Ashes blog1019: I’ve just heard the shocking news of Arturo Gatti’s tragic death. Now, if England are going to attempt to emulate anyone today, they could do a lot worse than Gatti. In fact, Gatti probably would have won the match from here.

The sun is out

1010: Bright sunshine in Cardiff, and my immediate reaction is "good". England don’t deserve to be saved by the weather. Throw them a shovel and tell them to dig their way out of this mess. Prove us wrong England, show us you’ve got some stones…<br/


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Andy Worthington: Former Insider Shatters Credibility of Military Commissions

On Wednesday, I reported how Retired Rear Admiral John D. Hutson, the former Judge Advocate General of the US Navy from 1997 to 2000, had…

Live – German Grand Prix qualifying

LIVE TEXT COMMENTARY (all times BST)

606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on the action

To get involved text us on 81111 with FORMULA 1 before your message. (Not all contributions can be used; UK mobiles only; network rates apply)

By Caroline Cheese

BBC Sport’s Sarah Holt at the Nurburgring: "Caroline, many apologies for my delayed greetings. BBC HQ has been up in arms this morning as Eddie Jordan arrived with news that the hotel left a hot water bottle on his bed last night. Given the bone-rattling gusts that we are being subjected to up in the mountains, the rest of the BBC crew would give anything for such luxuries. Yes I know, how the cars cope with the chilly temperatures will be much more crucial come qualifying."1008: Just seeing a thermal image of the Force India mechanics working on Giancarlo Fisichella’s car. Not sure why, although I can exclusively reveal that none of the Force India mechanics are hot at the moment. And there’s Timo Glock, his helmet bearing the words ‘GlockDog’ in gold lettering. Word.BBC Sport’s pit-lane reporter Lee McKenzie: "It’ll be interesting to see if Lewis Hamilton can continue his momentum after finishing top of the timesheets in practice on Friday. Or was it simply a confidence boost for engine partner Mercedes-Benz on home turf One team principal told me yesterday that they reckoned Hamilton was just running on vapours to look good and there was no more to it than that."1002: Dark clouds overhead at the Nurburgring, and the weather forecast for today and tomorrowis not looking clever. Although I’m feeling ready for another wet race, don’t know about you.BBC Sport’s Jake Humphrey on Twitter:"BBC F1 team are in the house. Eddie Jordan forgot a jumper so is wearing a lovely BBC top. It’s still cold. Could this be Mark Webber’s pole day"1000: Green light is on and the cars are streaming out of the pits. Except Kimi Raikkonen, who’s probably had a lie-in. Oh no, here he is now.0957: If Bernie is reading this, I am also a trustworthy person. Very, very trustworthy. So if you’ve got another of those blank cheques lying around… Everyone else, manually refresh your page for the magic of moving pictures (in the UK).BBC Sport’s Andrew Benson at the Nurburgring: "At breakfast at Ferrari this morning, I put orange juice on my cornflakes and burnt my toast. Three early starts in a row must be catching up with me. It’s gone all cloudy again, too."0951: I’ve held off as long as I can… On to politics. Bernie Ecclestone has told the Times newspaper that Max Mosley will not go back on his promise to step down as FIA boss. "He’s an honourable person," says Bernie. "I’ve always said Max can have a cheque signed by me, without any name or amount on it, because he’s a trustworthy guy."0947: Mark Webber was the quickest man in first practice yesterday, but Sebastian Vettel was the faster of the two Red Bulls in the afternoon. It literally hurts me to support an Aussie, but I’ll make an exception for Webber. I’d like to see him win one too.

Text in your views on 81111

From Andy via text on 81111: "Be great to see Webber get a win this weekend. Top bloke!"Force India on Twitter:"Weather much better this morning, warmer and sunny. Chance of rain later."BBC Sport’s Andrew Benson at the Nurburgring: "The Eifel mountains looked lovely this morning, with large patches of blue sky and cotton wool clouds. Could we be in for a rare dry Nurburgring day"0943: McLaren have gone four races without a point, and Lewis Hamilton has failed to get out of first qualifying for the last three, so the team have rushed ahead with new aero parts for Hamilton’s car, with one mechanic apparently working 36 hours flat out. Heikki Kovalainen, though, is stuck with the old package.0938: Before qualifying, we’ll warm up with a bit of final practice at 1000 BST. Lewis Hamilton went quickest in second practice yesterday in a move that was probably designed to please Mercedes at their home track. But Hamilton seems pleased with his hastily revamped McLaren. "We’ve still got a long way to go but, most importantly, these new upgrades are pushing us in the right direction"0930: Hello. Some would say you’ve got too much sport to choose from today. But let me tell you this: it’s going to rain all day in Cardiff, and today’s stage in the Tour de France will see the riders string out on the way up the hill and then catch each other up on the way down again. Something like that anyway. So stick with me, I’ve got qualifying thrills and spills for you


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.