PLANS to encourage more people to walk and cycle in Bicester have been approved.
The town will see speed limits slowed and new cycle lanes added to major roads, as part of a major programme of works to encourage uptake of so-called 'active travel'.
The improvements will also be made in Witney.
Yvonne Constance, Oxfordshire County Council’s cabinet member for transport and the environment, signed off on the two schemes on Thursday.
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However, plans for an experimental cycle lane on one Bicester road were abandoned, and special ‘tactile surfaces’ for the partially-sighted and blind were introduced into the Witney scheme after concerns from a local charity.
In Bicester, plans are based on an official blueprint to increase cycling from the current 3,000 bike trips a day to 9,000 trips a day by 2031, and also increasing walking trips from 18,000 a year to 24,000 a year.
To do this, parking bays at a busy junction on Villiers Road would be removed and new pedestrian and cycle paths along Middleton Stoney Road, Oxford Road and Kings End are set to be introduced.
While Ms Constance approved the two schemes, some changes were made after concerns from public speakers at the meeting on February 25.
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Plans for a ‘contraflow’ cycle lane, running against traffic down the Causeway in Bicester, were delayed.
Public speakers Chris Brennan from Sustrans and Paul Troop from the Bicester Bike Users Group warned it could be dangerous.
Ms Constance agreed and said the Causeway cycle path plans needed a ‘rethink’.
The two schemes started life as part of a bid for Government cash from the emergency active travel fund.
This pot of money was announced by transport secretary Grant Shapps for council to use to encourage the uptake of cycling and walking instead of using private cars after the first lockdown ended.
Oxfordshire won nearly £3m in the second round of the funding, which is being spent on several projects in Oxford.
The Bicester and Witney schemes were originally included in this second bid, but the Government did not provide enough cash for them.
The Oxfordshire Local Enterprise Partnership provided the cash instead.
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