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6 comments
One thing that has to be done here is for the Police and the principal client (lets nail that responsibility back to TfL here and NOT the bus operator) produce a non judgemental statement of facts.
The bus involved was a New Bus for London (Borismaster) on route 15 coming from Liverpool Street (straight through this junction*) the victim's direction of travel is not at present known.
*Traffic signals from The Aldwych and Arundel Street show stop aspect when traffic is moving in this direction, and both show green simultaneously (making the exit from The Aldwych 'challenging' for cyclists, as a number of bus routes then move rapidly to the left for bus stop R and the next bus stop(S))
Route 15 buses pull in to the left at bus stop R immediately across the junction.
Curiously, whilst the pictures show the street taped off for Police investigations (so very shortly after the crash) there is no sign of the bus. Was it moved or did the driver fail to stop immediately the collision occurred?
Those who are aware of the detail in other collisions might want to report the observed distance that the truck or bus travelled after the initial impact. In far too many cases this is 20 metres or more. At one inquest we heard that the truck driver travelled 49 metres after the fatal impact at 13 mph - hardly an emergency stop? The recent crashes (fatal pedestrian - Victoria / trapped leg cyclist - Paddington) both show that the truck drivers stopped quickly, at the moment of impact. Let the investigation determine whether the drivers should have seen the potential collision in advance, but at least they reacted appropriately when it happened.
Hits home.
I work in WC1, my initial thought is that either bus or bike would have to RLJ for them to come into contact; both junctions are controlled by lights.
The bit I find tricky is where Aldwych merges with the Strand, you often get vehicles fighting for the lane despite lights contolling the flow.
My thoughts are with his family and friends.
I ride around that area regularly and it's a horribly designed set of roads and junctions.
That particular bit is, as demonstrated, lethal.
You have lights controlling the traffic round from the top of Alwych but nothing controlling the merging traffic coming from Arundel Street/Strand, and you get a lot of RLJing and amber gambling vehicles!
there are lights controlling traffic exiting Arundel street... or are they only lights for the pedestrian crossing?
Horrible waste of life. So avoidable.