For episode 78 of the road.cc Podcast, we donned our reading glasses, grabbed our bikes, and headed over to the National Cycle Network, that underfunded, unwieldy, often fractured, but very important collection of routes, lanes, and paths used by cyclists across the UK and which forms the central subject of Laura Laker’s brilliant new book, Potholes and Pavements.
After an in-depth behind the keyboard chat with Laura, we then turn our attentions in part two to the upcoming general election, and what its outcome may mean for cycling and active travel, with Dr Maya Singer Hobbs, a senior research fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research, a think tank that earlier this month claimed the UK was “travelling in the wrong direction” when it comes to transport.
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Potholes and Pavements: A Bumpy Ride on Britain’s National Cycle Network – described by road.cc’s reviewer as “compulsory reading for anyone making decisions about active travel” – is Laura Laker’s debut book, a fascinating and thoroughly entertaining read that’s part-autobiography, part-travelogue, part-history, and part-stirring manifesto on the state of cycling and cycle infrastructure in the UK.
> Potholes and Pavements: A Bumpy Ride on Britain’s National Cycle Network
To mark its publication, Laker, one of the country’s most respected active travel journalists, returned to her old road.cc stomping grounds to discuss her inspiration for the book, which saw her explore the UK by bike using the National Cycle Network, uncovering its often accidental history and catching up with cyclists from Sustrans and beyond who use and look after it every day.
During her wide-ranging chat with Ryan, Laura also explores the pros and cons of the NCN (parts of which were described by Sustrans’ own CEO as “crap”), how we can make the NCN and other cycling infrastructure better and more accessible, encouraging more people to take up cycling in the process, the current ongoing two-wheeled ‘culture wars’ – and why riding a bike is really all about the people we meet along the way.
And in part two, with the general election looming ever larger on the horizon (and cycling at the forefront of many politicians’ mind – mainly for the wrong reasons) things get all political, with Ryan and Jack sitting down for a chat about the future of active travel policy in the UK with by Dr Maya Singer-Hobbs, a senior research fellow in energy, climate, housing, and infrastructure at Institute for Public Policy Research.
Last week, the think tank – which has found that over a third of people “want the opportunity to walk, wheel or cycle more than they currently do” – claimed that new data showing a 7.3 per cent decline in cycle journeys and two percent rise in car journeys between 2022 and 2023 proves that the “UK is travelling in the wrong direction” and “sleepwalking towards a traffic-heavy future”.
Dr Singer Hobbs discusses why that’s the case, the changing face of the Conservative government’s active travel policy in recent years, how much this can be attributed to the negative rhetoric around cycling pervading social media, what it will take to create a “greener, fairer” society, and active travel’s prospects should – as predicted – Labour win the election and Keir Starmer grabs the keys to No. 10.
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