Transport for London (TfL) is challenging app designers to use its date to help make it easier for people on two wheels to get around the capital. The announcement coincides a report on how motorists in the city are using apps to find ‘rat runs’ to avoid traffic jams, causing concern among residents of the streets affected.
TfL says mapping information for eight of London’s Cycle Superhighways as well as one Quietway has been added to its open data portal, which you can find here. New routes will be added once they are open.
According to TfL, the data will enable developers to accurately represent current routes in apps and on websites, and can also be combined with data already put in the public domain relating for example to the Santander Cycles hire scheme, or cycle parking at London Underground stations.
It says there are now in excess of 600 apps that use its data to help Londoners and visitors to the city get around, whether by bus, Tube, rail or on bikes.
London walking and cycling commissioner, Will Norman, said: “Millions of Londoners use apps to navigate around our city every day, and by ensuring this cycling data is available to developers, we can make a big difference to the way journeys are planned.
“By knowing where the infrastructure is and when new parts are opened, cyclists can pick the best route for them, rather than simply following the way they would go by car or bus. It’s yet another way we are working to make cycling even easier for all Londoners,” he added.
Motorists, too, are using apps to make their journey quicker, according to the London Evening Standard, with one, Waze, helping them find rat runs to avoid being stuck in traffic.
The newspaper says that the Google-owned app is leading to lorries becoming stuck and traffic jams in otherwise quiet residential streets.
Nigel Scott, who lives in Ringslade Road in Wood Green, told the newspaper that during the 8am rush hour peak, 300 vehicles an hour will pass along the road.
“It’s used as a rat run by people coming from the north, who want to weave their way through to the centre of London," he said.
London Assembly Member Caroline Russell, the Green Party’s transport spokeswoman, said: “I’m getting complaints from inner London, outer London, all over the place, from people who are saying that they are disturbed by vehicles getting blocked and unable to pass each other on residential roads."
The Standard added that Waze had not responded to a request for a comment.
Bloody hell... How are you doing now?
And I liked endura too. Got a nice long sleeve mostly merino long sleeve a little while back, in orange.
No, the Ebay lights have been around for several years, this Lezyne light just appeared.
They shouldn't worry - the second part of the "tariff" refrain is "they can make it in US and they'll do very well".
"At the going down of the sun, it will get in our eyes and cause us to crash into things."
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Does the "super-loud yellow" also help alert (non-deaf / non-earbud-wearing) pedestrians? Or will it just mean dogs bark at me?
One thing that bothers me is the use of antidepressant med and driving, it never gets picked up by police. Most of these types of medicines state...
Indeed - but again these are perhaps questions we should keep asking. Even if the immediate answer is "well we are where we are" or "how on earth...