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Tue 25 Sep, 11:17 am UTC

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Jenny Jones on the London Hovis Freewheel

By Rosee Woodland

As the London Freewheel drew to a close on Sunday, Bikeradar.com caught up with organiser Jenny Jones to find out how the day had gone.

Jenny, a Green Party London assembly member and transport adviser to Ken Livingstone, told us that the event - which cost Transport for London £1.5million, with another £600,000 from sponsors Hovis - will come back next year and be even bigger. Here's our exclusive interview with her.

BikeRadar: The event reached capacity today. You must be delighted.
Jenny Jones: I have no idea at the moment how many people came but obviously it's been very popular. Of course it means that next year we can close more roads.For me that's really the way forward. This is an annual event now and we will be closing roads and we will be increasing the numbers. We had to stop the registration at 38,000 and I'm sure there's more than 38,000 here. And people are having such fun. I also wasn't sure who would actually come. I thought the lycra brigade wouldn't come and families probably wouldn't come and in fact every body came. And I think people are now going to be asking when next year's Freewheel will happen. It's just going to be a date in the diary.
BR:
Do you think this is the kind of event that will get more people in London commuting by bike?
JJ: There is this thing about feeling safe. Women, particularly, want to feel safe on the roads and so today's fantastic, well, for everybody.
But people quite often don't realise how close it is between places in London and how easy it is to cycle, so I hope today will translate into two things. It's going to translate into more cyclists tomorrow and the next day, and forever after, but I also hope that it will reassure everybody, including motorists and bus drivers, that it is nicer if you have more cyclists on the roads.
BR: How's the reaction from the non-cycling community been to the shutting down of central London for the day?

JJ: There has been negative feedback, but my answer is, if you've got 40,000 people who want the roads closed and who are prepared to turn up and use those roads and enjoy them, then surely that outweighs the few people who might want to bring their cars into town on that day? Every day is the day of the car - this is one day a year when it's the day of the bike.
BR: We spoke to a rental company called OyBike at the Freewheel Festival today, which has rental points in Hammersmith and Fulham. Is that the kind of scheme you're going to be looking at for the whole of London soon?

JJ:That's exactly the sort of thing, because this Velib scheme in Paris is that sort of thing. OyBike seems to be doing very well, but obviously if we could somehow link up with OyBike and have it London wide then it would have a huge impact.
Quite often there would be tourists or business people in central London who'd want to do short hops with their bikes, but I reckon if you got these rental bikes out into the suburbs, if you got them out into the town centres, like Sutton and like Peckham, you would actually find people using the bikes for short distances. It's a great idea.
BR: London has a target to reduce pollution by 60 per cent by 2025, and there's been a report recently saying that the only way to do this is to ban cars from the centre. What are your plans for hitting the target?

JJ: Well of course, removing every car from London is, at the moment, impossible. There are people who do need their cars and I'm quite happy to accept that. But I would say it's a tiny minority who need their cars. Really it is time for people to accept that using your car for every day trips is actually very last century, and we've got to think about the future. We've got to get more people cycling, fewer people in their cars, and on public transport but we've also got to limit aviation.

BR: Finally, did you do the Freewheel circuit?
JJ: Of course - twice!

 

The Freewheel cost Transport for London £1.5million, with another £600,000 from sponsors Hovis.

 

User Comments

There are 3 comments on this post

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 comments

  • I'm really confused about who precisely does drive in London? I don't know ANYONE who does! Apart from commercial vehicles, I can't see why there's a need.

  • Sadly one cannot live by the bike alone in London. There are many reasons why alternative transport must be used at present. Security of one's bike is probably the main resaon why people do not use bikes for all journeys. One can cycle to and from work (providing one's workplace has secure bike parking) but too many bicycles are stolen to make this a universal option for every journey. Safety is another issue. Fine for an adult experienced cyclist to face London's traffic but would you really want your children to risk their lives every day>? Often the safer option is to drive them or to use public transport (if available) particularly where one has more than one child to supervise. Another factor is that it is not always acceptable to turn up at an appointment in lycra sweating and unshowered after the exertion of a ride. While I accept that it is possible to ride slowly, is that really an option?

  • I think Glider hit a primary point about cycling in general - and its perception by non-cyclists. Namely that of turning up in meetings and to the office sweating and covered in road grime. I'm looked upon as some sort of eccentric odd-bod because I actually choose to come to work by bike - even when it's raining ('but you're going to get wet aren't you?'). I don't always wear Lycra (apart from in winter for warmth and to protect my 'normal' clothes) and I don't always sweat or smell, but it's how I'm perceived.

    This attitude is one of the things we have to change. To get everyone to realise that this is perfectly normal. People of all walks of life are going to have to start accepting the fact that many of us cycle, and that we aren't going to look as if we've just stepped out of a cosmetics commercial. People have to be able to turn up to important meetings with cycle clips still attached to their trousers - and they should be applauded by their employers for their far-sighted attitude, not derided as nutters.

    I think things are changing; just not quickly enough.

  • 1

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