Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Is it worth it anymore..... ?

Options
1679111217

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 5,561 ✭✭✭Slutmonkey57b


    I think that's reasonable, and I don't at all disagree that the "fake motorways" concept should be put aside either. If a cyclist looks at the n4/m50 interchange and thinks "that's for cyclists" then... I don't think it's unreasonable to expect the correct conclusion would be "I'm not even going to attempt that", first timer or not. Nobody who spends half an hour in this country expects that the road designations of n, b, a etc actually mean anything. Later on in its route the n4 is only barely a 2 lane road. But just there it's obviously a motorway interchange.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,461 ✭✭✭mcgratheoin


    No
    MediaMan wrote: »
    It's just that it's so common, that people who do it don't think of it as breaking the law.

    Nail on the head with respect to what I see on my commute every day.


  • Registered Users Posts: 471 ✭✭dermabrasion


    No
    Its kind of like the US gun lobby: speed limits, mobile phones, 1-drink / zero-drink limit and mandatory bike lanes all have general support. Just don't take my gun.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,454 ✭✭✭Macy0161


    No
    As a car driver, I'd have to say it depends on which section of the N4 you're talking about. All the way from Kilmainham and particularly out past the M50 is effectively motorway and the only reason it isn't officially made one is that they like to keep speed traps there.
    This is the problem - speeding is so ingrained it's not seen as the problem. The problem is when it's enforced - road safe to do the extra speed, fish in a barrel etc.

    The reason the N4 from Kilmainham isn't "effectively motorway" is because it is open to other road users, such as cyclists, mopeds etc. The speed limits reflect that, motorists don't respect the speed limits or the reasons for them.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,561 ✭✭✭Slutmonkey57b


    Macy0161 wrote: »
    This is the problem - speeding is so ingrained it's not seen as the problem. The problem is when it's enforced - road safe to do the extra speed, fish in a barrel etc.

    The reason the N4 from Kilmainham isn't "effectively motorway" is because it is open to other road users, such as cyclists, mopeds etc. The speed limits reflect that, motorists don't respect the speed limits or the reasons for them.

    For the majority of the Con Colbert Road, the speed limit is 80, but there are no crossings, no junctions, no pedestrians, there is a barrier along the length of the route, and there is no possibility of cross-traffic. So the speed limit along that section has nothing to do with the appropriate speed limit for the safety of the road, and everything to do with the ease of ticketing. Turn off the N4 onto a side road and you can do 100, legally, no problem, despite being in a built up area with foot and cycle traffic.

    Speeding isn't as much of a cultural issue as it is caused by improper enforcement; the only time speed limits are enforced are in areas where they are artificially kept low, sections like the one above. In the actual accident black spots and danger points where deaths happen, they are set randomly with no enforcement. Therefore it is not surprising that most motorists generate a feeling of "speed limits are nonsense anyway" because in this country they are.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 11,769 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    No
    If a cyclist looks at the n4/m50 interchange and thinks "that's for cyclists" then... I don't think it's unreasonable to expect the correct conclusion would be "I'm not even going to attempt that", first timer or not.


    Funnily enough, I did go through (I presume similar) N7/M50 interchange on a bike off-peak once. I couldn't figure out where the cycling route was supposed to be, so I gave it a shot, with misgivings. I won't surprise you by saying that the following day when I had to go that way (my mother was in hospital in Tallaght, and I lived in Kilmainham), I went via Greenhills Road, and apart from some unclassy car passengers throwing fast food at me out of a window, it was far preferable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,248 ✭✭✭07Lapierre


    No
    I think that's reasonable, and I don't at all disagree that the "fake motorways" concept should be put aside either. If a cyclist looks at the n4/m50 interchange and thinks "that's for cyclists" then... I don't think it's unreasonable to expect the correct conclusion would be "I'm not even going to attempt that", first timer or not. Nobody who spends half an hour in this country expects that the road designations of n, b, a etc actually mean anything. Later on in its route the n4 is only barely a 2 lane road. But just there it's obviously a motorway interchange.


    Funny you should mention the N4/M50 junction...

    https://goo.gl/maps/yKydwBHmeyE2


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,113 ✭✭✭mr spuckler


    tomasrojo wrote: »
    Funnily enough, I did go through the (I presume similar) N7/M50 interchange on a bike off-peak once. I couldn't figure out where the cycling route was supposed to be, so I gave it a shot, with misgivings. I won't surprise you by saying that the following day when I had to go that way (my mother was in hospital in Tallaght, and I lived in Kilmainham), I went via Greenhills Road, and apart from some unclassy car passengers throwing fast food at me out of a window, it was far preferable.

    i've cycled the N4/M50 junction a good few times in both directions and honestly didn't find it that bad. i wouldn't want to do it as beginner mind!

    maybe i was just lucky with my timings (though often mid to late afternoon on fridays heading outbound) but clear signalling, eye contact and assertive positioning did the trick on those occasions.

    having driven the N7 one plenty of times i don't think it'd be half as straightforward on the bike.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,769 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    No
    I might be mixing up the N4 and N7!

    It's the one at the end of the Naas Road/R110 heading west that I went over and found a bit uncomfortable.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,368 ✭✭✭Chuchote


    No
    It's also a question of signage. As you drive along this road (especially when you're on the way into Dublin) you pass a couple of small speed signs - but you're continuing from a motorway, and it's really easy to miss these. When a road looks and feels like a motorway but isn't, and the speed limits are much lower, surely the speed limit signs should be much bigger, so you really see them. And there should be "Slow down, exiting motorway" signs.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 9,454 ✭✭✭Macy0161


    No
    For the majority of the Con Colbert Road, the speed limit is 80, but there are no crossings, no junctions, no pedestrians, there is a barrier along the length of the route, and there is no possibility of cross-traffic. So the speed limit along that section has nothing to do with the appropriate speed limit for the safety of the road, and everything to do with the ease of ticketing. Turn off the N4 onto a side road and you can do 100, legally, no problem, despite being in a built up area with foot and cycle traffic.

    Speeding isn't as much of a cultural issue as it is caused by improper enforcement; the only time speed limits are enforced are in areas where they are artificially kept low, sections like the one above. In the actual accident black spots and danger points where deaths happen, they are set randomly with no enforcement. Therefore it is not surprising that most motorists generate a feeling of "speed limits are nonsense anyway" because in this country they are.
    May not have pedestrians or cross roads, but again it is open to cyclists and sub 50cc/ sub 50kph motorised vehicles. This provides reasoning for the lower speed limit. "Artificially low" is a judgement made from a motorist perspective, when it doesn't have the same use restrictions as a motorway, regardless of barriers, junctions etc.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,754 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    No
    tomasrojo wrote: »
    I might be mixing up the N4 and N7!

    It's the one at the end of the Naas Road/R110 heading west that I went over and found a bit uncomfortable.

    Yep, N4 / M50 interchange has dedicate cycle lanes going over the top. Wouldn't fancy the N7, too many slip roads coming on and off, back roads around Lyons, Peamont and Sallins are quite nice around there, and if its not too mucky, the canal is very mellow.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,433 ✭✭✭Gerry


    The tone is interesting - no business being there, not navigable by cyclists. Legally cyclists are allowed on the N4, its the main road west from dublin and so even with the major shortcomings on cycling infrastructure on it, people will use it to some extent. Whether that is slightly foolish or not is up to individuals to make their own decisions. But saying that its effectively a motorway is inaccurate and seems to be throwing in the towel really.
    I never really got to expand on my point, which is that if I use a route that avoids the n4, once I get onto a road with traffic, I'll still get the same abuse / beeping / near misses. The issue of being on a road with fast moving traffic will be swapped for cars overtaking me around blind corners.

    The solution is to build proper cycling infrastructure on the main routes and not pretend that pushing cyclists onto side roads is going to solve the issue.
    And I would agree with the earlier point - building this will take huge amounts of cars off that route.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,433 ✭✭✭Gerry


    To come back to specific junctions on the n4 - the n4/m50 one is not the main problem. There are multiple ways around it. The major issue I find is with the turnoff for liffey valley going westbound- there isn't an alternative for cyclists there.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,454 ✭✭✭Macy0161


    No
    Chuchote wrote: »
    It's also a question of signage. As you drive along this road (especially when you're on the way into Dublin) you pass a couple of small speed signs - but you're continuing from a motorway, and it's really easy to miss these. When a road looks and feels like a motorway but isn't, and the speed limits are much lower, surely the speed limit signs should be much bigger, so you really see them. And there should be "Slow down, exiting motorway" signs.
    iirc there's big motorway ends signs at, eh, the end of the motorway. The colour of the junction signage also changes from blue.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,772 ✭✭✭Scotty #


    There's two sides to the coin.

    About 21:15 last night, half dark, travelling from Ashbourne to Drogheda near Irish Cement, a fairly rural but busy road, I spotted a sports cyclist coming toward me with no light and no reflective or florescent clothing, blending in nicely with the high hedges along that road. A fatality waiting to happen.

    Regarding speeding. I think that much higher fines would help. €750 in France! €80 here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,561 ✭✭✭Slutmonkey57b


    Gerry wrote: »
    The tone is interesting - no business being there, not navigable by cyclists. Legally cyclists are allowed on the N4, its the main road west from dublin and so even with the major shortcomings on cycling infrastructure on it, people will use it to some extent. Whether that is slightly foolish or not is up to individuals to make their own decisions. But saying that its effectively a motorway is inaccurate and seems to be throwing in the towel really.
    I never really got to expand on my point, which is that if I use a route that avoids the n4, once I get onto a road with traffic, I'll still get the same abuse / beeping / near misses. The issue of being on a road with fast moving traffic will be swapped for cars overtaking me around blind corners.

    The solution is to build proper cycling infrastructure on the main routes and not pretend that pushing cyclists onto side roads is going to solve the issue.
    And I would agree with the earlier point - building this will take huge amounts of cars off that route.

    Well, I believe I was explicitly not making the argument that "cyclists have no right to be there", but making the point that it's not reasonable or logical for a cyclist to travel that route/interchange and think it was designed for safety or cyclists in mind. It's *barely* safe for cars, the way it's laid out. That's why I said it's effectively a motorway; the "N" designation is actually meaningless, it's a fig leaf, it's a lie. So if things should change there it really isn't logical to run that system as though "we've got to make sure this is cyclist friendly", it's as you say to admit the truth that it's not really fit for cycling and make a proper dedicated arrangement for car alternatives.

    The liffey valley turnoff is a prime example; yes it is technically legal to cycle along there. However that turnoff combines;
    • All the traffic turning off the M50
    • All the traffic heading east/westbound out of the city to Lucan/Leixlip and commuter towns beyond
    • All the traffic heading to one of the largest retail locations in the country

    where they all have to merge and cross over each other in a very very short distance to get to their destination. That is a massive, massive volume of traffic. Having cyclists along that section is stupid, and it's not the fault of cyclists that it's stupid, it's the fault of planners who wouldn't bite the bullet and admit that section is a motorway junction that needed to be planned out as such.

    However if a cyclist takes the approach "I've as much right to be here as anyone" then I think that's about as clever as me driving a saloon car into a bog road designed for 4x4's and complaining I got stuck. Yes technically I'm legally allowed to do it, but if I had any sense I wouldn't and it's my own fault if I do. NO I am not saying "cyclists deserve what they get if they cycle there" before you jump to that conclusion, I am saying that a person who commutes by car, bike or anything else needs to be pragmatic and sensible about what they're doing.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,940 Mod ✭✭✭✭CramCycle


    What are the alternatives, I have cycled over it a few times without issue but I admit that there are those without the same experience or attitude who would be paralysed doing it and would be a danger to themselves.

    I know there are alternatives but my recollection is they are not well sign posted.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,561 ✭✭✭Slutmonkey57b


    That's another good point, lack of signposting. Unless you stick to the motorways or N roads, your chances of finding a useful signpost with directions on it are zilch. You're lucky to get street names. This forces commuters to either stick to the routes they know or do a lot of planning out in advance.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,192 ✭✭✭Fian


    No
    CramCycle wrote: »
    What are the alternatives, I have cycled over it a few times without issue but I admit that there are those without the same experience or attitude who would be paralysed doing it and would be a danger to themselves.

    I know there are alternatives but my recollection is they are not well sign posted.

    I have cycled it a few times as well, mainly because i hadn't planned an alternative.

    The strawberry beds and into the phoenix park is the way i would go now (turning off at lucan) but the strawberry beds have their own problems - narrow road, not alot of traffic but what there is tends to travel fairly quickly and tends to be willing to overtake on blind corners.

    I hate being overtaken on narrow blind corners, I know if a car comes around it the overtaking driver is going to swing into me to avoid the head on collision, despite my not being surrounded by a metal cage for protection. They are effectively risking my life for their convenience.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,368 ✭✭✭Chuchote


    No
    Did I hear that the Guinness Bridge in the Strawberry Beds was to be re-floored and reopened?


  • Registered Users Posts: 345 ✭✭mackeminexile


    CramCycle wrote: »
    What are the alternatives, I have cycled over it a few times without issue but I admit that there are those without the same experience or attitude who would be paralysed doing it and would be a danger to themselves.

    I know there are alternatives but my recollection is they are not well sign posted.

    The N4 is all about being aware (isn't it all). I 'take' the bus lane travelling eastbound at Liffey Valley and haven't really had many issues. The turnoff the other way (westbound) is awful. I've said it on another thread here, the westbound cycle route is crap. No signage, you're off up through Ballyfermot before the Chapelizod bypass and it's as unsafe due to volume and side roads etc as the speeding bus lane jumpers on the bypass. Alternatively you go up past the park and use the cycle lanes on the wrong side of the road and then whichever road bridge/footbridge to get to the right place.

    I love the cycle in along the Liffey and Strawberry beds, Tower Road then the Park but the Liffey road can have it's issues too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 63 ✭✭Star hurl


    A lot of people would cut off into Palmerstown over the kings hospital bridge and then either straight into Lucan or over the bridge that brings you to Texaco garage .


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,474 ✭✭✭✭greenspurs


    And meanwhile outside Dublin .........

    Member of local club knocked off in Waterford town , car kept on driving .....
    He wasnt too badly injured, and the car driver was unijured

    "Bright lights and Thunder .................... " #NoPopcorn



  • Registered Users Posts: 11,769 ✭✭✭✭tomasrojo


    No
    That's another good point, lack of signposting. Unless you stick to the motorways or N roads, your chances of finding a useful signpost with directions on it are zilch. You're lucky to get street names. This forces commuters to either stick to the routes they know or do a lot of planning out in advance.


    Yeah, I spend a while looking at maps trying to figure out routes that don't involved quasi-motorway roads. Works for me, but, as I said in a recent thread already, I should really just be able to use the main road and trust the engineers to have created something low-stress and navigable.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 49,617 CMod ✭✭✭✭magicbastarder


    Chuchote wrote: »
    Did I hear that the Guinness Bridge in the Strawberry Beds was to be re-floored and reopened?
    i've heard about a few different campaigns but not about any concrete plans?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,368 ✭✭✭Chuchote


    No
    i've heard about a few different campaigns but not about any concrete plans?

    Ah, you're right - I heard it gossiped about but the gossip had grown legs

    http://irishcycle.com/2015/09/30/call-for-guinness-bridge-over-liffey-to-be-reopened-as-part-of-greenway/

    Apparently it's at the petition stage now. Would be great.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,754 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    No
    greenspurs wrote: »
    And meanwhile outside Dublin .........

    Member of local club knocked off in Waterford town , car kept on driving .....
    He wasnt too badly injured, and the car driver was unijured

    Sorry to hear this, which road out of interest?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,213 ✭✭✭pm1977x


    greenspurs wrote: »
    And meanwhile outside Dublin .........

    Member of local club knocked off in Waterford town , car kept on driving .....
    He wasnt too badly injured, and the car driver was unijured

    Back in Dublin ;) saw a young lad falling off his bike as it swung up behind him at Baker's Corner (Deansgrange) this morning - from what I could tell he was about to be creamed by a car turning left in front of him so he ended up turning/swerving into the curb and half hopping/half falling off.

    He seemed okay but understandably shook, woman who nearly hit him then nearly creamed another cyclist coming from a different direction as she opened her door to get out. :eek:


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 10,474 ✭✭✭✭greenspurs


    smacl wrote: »
    Sorry to hear thus, which road out of interest?

    In the centre of town at the Junction of The Mall and Parnell street.

    "Bright lights and Thunder .................... " #NoPopcorn



Advertisement