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CycleStreets blog

News from CycleStreets

Archive for the ‘Funding’ Category

Helping campaigners campaign: our GeoVation challenge bid

Friday, February 4th, 2011
Cycling in the Netherlands happens because of bike-friendly culture and excellent infrastructure.

Let's face it – cycling conditions in the UK need to be improved massively. Cycle lanes that end unexpectedly, roads shared with lorries and traffic fumes, non-existent cycle parking. Any cyclist can give you a catalogue of problems that need tackling.

The end result is far fewer people cycling than there should be. Despite odd spots around the UK like Cambridge, Oxford, York which have a cycling culture, the outlook around the UK is not great.

Cycle campaign groups are key to changing this. These groups – large and small, national and local, are the people on the ground who work make cycling better. They're already enthused, so we need to give them as much support as possible.

How can cycle campaigners deal with the deluge of problems on our streets?

As well as our journey planner, CycleStreets includes a Photomap (with so far around 26,000 photos), designed to allow cycle campaigners (like us) and the public pinpoint problems they experience. In short, it's a campaigning tool aimed to help campaigners do their job. However, it could be made a lot more useful and user-friendly than it currently is.

We plan to help solve the problems that every campaign group around the UK continually faces.

We want to build on the existing Photomap to provide cycle campaigners with the best possible tools to make their job much easier.

  • Cyclists and the public need a better way to pinpoint problems like lack of cycle parking, desirable new cycle paths, better on-street conditions, etc.;
  • Campaigners need tools to prioritise problems in their area and group related problems together;
  • People need simpler means to collaborate by adding local knowledge and views about each problem;
  • Cycle campaign groups need better tools to make the scale of the problem clearer;
  • People who cycle through an area need to become aware of campaign work going on;
  • The profile of local cycle campaign groups needs to be much higher and they can be helped get more members;
  • Campaigners shouldn't have to reinvent the wheel but have access to great tools immediately;
  • Campaign groups need to help Local Authorities listen and take up the problems;
  • Local Authorities and funding bodies need a clearer idea of the scale of the problem so that money can be found;
  • Campaigners need more direct access to related information such as collision statistics, to avoid having to search for it.

… all in the most user-friendly way possible.

How would it work, in brief?

  1. Cyclists would pinpoint problems (points/lines) on a map, e.g. lack of cycle parking, hostile roads, absence of needed route, poor quality cycling conditions, etc., with a photo if available
  2. (Mobile apps can also post to the database using the existing infrastructure to enable this.)
  3. Others can publicly comment on each submission and add local knowledge
  4. A 'heat map' of problem areas would start to develop, together with per-point indications of status of a problem
  5. Each location effectively becomes an entry in both the map and in a forum-style view
  6. Campaign group members would log in to their group's area of the website, and would have drag-and-drop -style tools to prioritise and discuss the locations. Locations could also be grouped together, e.g. so that multiple issues arising from one development are treated most effectively.
  7. Documents, e-mails and web references can be 'attached' to a particular issue so that all information relating to one issue is in one place.
  8. Cyclists in each area would also be encouraged to register and to 'draw on the map' their typical journeys (helped by the CycleStreets journey planner), so that they can then be alerted to issues and campaigns along those routes
  9. As an issue progresses in terms of external campaigning, it is updated and 'published' in various ways via the site
  10. Prioritised lists can be 'pushed out' to Local Authority contacts, or they can be invited to join the conversation
  11. When issues are finally resolved these would be marked as such, also publicising the work of the group concerned
  12. Where routes in the CycleStreets journey planner are planned that pass through improved areas, the work of the group would be publicised!

The whole system would need to be extremely user-friendly, so that it gets the widest possible usage and actively engages people without technical skills.

Our proposal

We are proposing to submit a bid to the GeoVation Challenge, the Ordnance Survey initiative which is running a funding competition, "How can we improve transport in Britain?".

We plan to bid for one of the six pots of £30,000 available to create an extremely user-friendly set of tools that would be available free-of-charge to every campaign group in the country, branded in an area-specific way and embeddable within campaign group websites.

Put simply, we want campaigners to be able to carry out their work much more effectively, to reduce the effort required, all the way from identifying problems to seeing them fixed. As members of Cambridge Cycling Campaign, we have ourselves long-needed tools like this, and we want to create a facility which will be enthusiastically taken up around the country.

Here is our full draft proposal. We welcome ideas for enhancements.

Please support our bid

Please comment on the bid here.

Please let us know your comments – you can contact us or just leave a comment below.

CycleStreets discussed in Parliament

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

Friday 21st January 2011 saw a short Adjournment Debate in the House of Commons on the subject of "Cycling in England". A question was raised as to the government's support for use of tax money (£2.4 million) on the TransportDirect cycle journey planner when CycleStreets (£28.1k spent) already exists.

This debate on cycling was secured by Julian Huppert MP, a long-standing supporter of cycling. His excellent speech covered a range of issues – many of which are raised by contributors to our Photomap – such as the issue of poor signing of contraflow streets, parking in cycle lanes and pavement parking, lack of cycle parking at stations and much more.

The MP ended his speech with this question:

"If I may finish on a suitably austere note: Other cycling enthusiasts have noticed, that the Government, in its Sustainable Transport White Paper, plans to spend more money on developing its own cycle journey planner. In the spirit, perhaps of the Big Society, could I point the Minister and her Department to the CycleStreets website, which already provides such a service, reliably and efficiently, and without requiring millions of pounds of government subsidy. The website was developed by two of my constituents, both avid cyclists, very much involved with the excellent Cambridge Cycling Campaign, and it cost a total of around £40,000 to cover the whole country. I hope the minister will consider the value for money of supporting and utilising their work, rather than inventing a new wheel. I look forward to her comments. Thank you."

— Julian Huppert MP

The Minister of State for Transport, Theresa Villiers MP responded, towards the end of her speech:

"My Honourable Friend for Cambridge concluded his remarks by expressing a degree of concern about the DfT developing its own cycle journey planner when websites, very good websites like CycleStreets, are already available. Well, I think, given the importance of this issue there is room for government action in this area to complement the websites provided by the private sector, particularly with our focus on giving novice cyclists the information they need to encourage them to go out cycling, so they've got the confidence that they can identify, able to identify, the easier and the safer routes."

— Theresa Villiers MP

[Actually, only £28.1k has been spent (compared to £2.4m allocated to TransportDirect) and of course the project depends on the excellent work of OpenStreetMap mappers. Also note that CycleStreets is a not-for-profit project.]

You can watch video of these two speeches online:

[Watch the video online]

 

[Watch the video online]

Screenshots from www.parliamentlive.tv

CycleStreets: Our Story – presentation to Net2Camb event

Friday, January 14th, 2011

We really enjoyed the January Net2Camb Meetup event, where one of our lead developers, Martin, gave a talk 'Our Story'. Thanks to Claire for organising the event and everyone who came!

It was particularly enjoyable as it was a rare opportunity to talk about the business and competition aspects of CycleStreets, about the challenges we face, and the future opportunities for the project.

We were also pleased that a couple of people came forward as new volunteers!

Here is our presentation [link]:

 

 

 

 

View more presentations from CycleStreets.

Design/usability improvements

Saturday, January 8th, 2011

Over the last month or so we've rolled out a range of usability-orientated design improvements to the Journey Planner and the Photomap. We'd like to do much more, but funding has not yet permitted this (see our funding drive).

These improvements complete the areas covered by our Sustainable City Grant, which funded a range of improvements that we have reported on via this blog over the last year. We'd like to thank them again for their support, which many users have benefited from.

If you can volunteer your time to help with further design work, do let us know!

Journey planner

The route result page should be much clearer now:

Journey planner page

The first thing we changed was to make it much clearer, in various ways, that there were a set of route choices available, one of the primary features of our route planner distinguishing it from more traditional car routing websites. This is an innovation we pioneered back in 2006, and is a concept now being used by other sites.

Secondly, we've made the map as large as we can fit for the current site width. We've had a lot of feedback about the size of the map panel, and would like to increase this still further with more radical changes to the design. We plan to move to a more fluid width design when funding or volunteer time permits (do let us know if you can help with design work).

A further key change has been to clean up the mish-mash of metadata about the route into a more easily-scannable and attractive set of information about the routing.

The CO2 saving compared to an equivalent car route is also now shown, again thanks to the Sustainable City grant.

Photomap

The Photomap browsing page now uses a much wider size, with mini bubbles enabling quicker previewing of photos:

Photomap page

The image location page has been redesigned to show off the image much better (at size 640px), and move the less important details of the image to be less distracting.

We hope to add photo commenting soon.

Location page

Implementation

Many of these changes took a while to implement as there were a lot of knock-on code changes (the area of the code concerned had become rather 'evolved', so to speak!).

We hope you like the changes and will find they make the system easier to use. We will add more changes as time and funding allow.

Funding drive launched

Monday, November 15th, 2010

CycleStreets is launching a funding drive to enable routing improvements and a large number of feature requests to be undertaken.

Our key target is for £90k to enable funding to pay for two full-time development positions for 18 months, plus smaller miscellaneous funds. With this, we believe the project will then be self-sustaining.

CycleStreets is set up on a not-for-profit basis, and is free for people to use. However, this does not mean that it costs nothing to run. CycleStreets does not currently pay full salaries to the core developers, meaning that only limited time for improvements is available. We have to survive and so have other jobs that take up our time. With full-time development staff, CycleStreets could reach its full potential much more quickly, and will help support getting more volunteers to work on the project.

Although in the longer term, the open-source model of a development team is where we wish to be at, routing work and analysis is complex and requires often weeks of solid, concentrated work. This makes it difficult to get volunteers, as they are more likely only to be able to 'dip in' to the code; the latter is useful for a range of smaller improvements, but more limited in terms of our core competency of endeavouring to create world-class cycle routing.

Read more at: http://www.cyclestreets.net/funding/drive/

Digital Heroes vote – vote closing soon

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

Please vote for us, to help us get £5k of much-needed funding.

To vote, just go to:

http://www.talk-talk.mirror.co.uk/region-e-anglia.htm

and click on the voting button next to Simon, one of our main developers.

Vote for Simon in the Digital Heroes 2010

Every penny would be used to improve the website to make it easier to use and produce better quality routes. Our users keep telling us these are the main things we need to be working on and we are doing what we can. More funding helps us get this job done more quickly and involve more people.

CycleStreets iPhone app now available!

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

iPhone app

The nearest thing to a SatNav for cycling is now available on your iPhone. Download it from the App Store now – for free!

And it's free!

Our OpenStreetMap-based routing, for cyclists by cyclists, is now available on the move, complete with full placefinder, tap-to-set and with turn-by-turn directions.

Read all about it on our new mobile page!

Brought to you by CycleStreets, the UK-based cycle routing people, run on a not-for-profit basis.

Plan cycle-friendly routes from A to B anywhere in the UK!

  • Innovative & quick "three taps" system: Set current location, tap the map to set destination, and plan!
  • Or search for any location in the UK, including full postcode support and local/national placefinder
  • Turn-by-turn itinerary view
  • Choose from different types of routing – fastest/quietest/balanced
  • Takes account of hills automatically
  • Plan journeys up to 100 miles (160km) long
  • Routes automatically saved for later viewing
  • Choice of map styles (including OpenCycleMap showing contours)
  • UK-wide (NB some areas of OpenStreetMap are better than others)
  • Routing for cyclists, by cyclists: your input to OpenStreetMap welcome

Cycle campaigners will love it too: Photomap photo facility

  • Need some cycle parking in your area? Take a picture and add it to our Photomap
  • Obstruction in the way? Report it! Or found an example of great infrastructure? Add it!
  • Browse the existing library of 25,000+ photos
  • Full category and caption support
  • Fully-integrated upload with automatic geolocation
  • Locations used by campaigners around the UK
  • Integrated signin facility

We'd particularly like to thank the Rees Jeffreys Road Fund and Cycle Cambridge for their grants towards this app, plus our developer Alan Paxton who put in an enormous amount of work.

Our long-awaited iPhone app is now available! Download it from the App Store now – for free.

You can still vote for us!

Monday, September 20th, 2010

Future Friendly have informed us that the voting deadline has been extended by a week, to 26th September, so if you've not yet voted, please do!

This week is the last week to vote to get OpenStreetMap-based CycleStreets a bursary of £10,000 in the Future Friendly Awards! We're one 5 groups in the national finals. Such funding would make an enormous difference to the project.

To win, we need as many votes as possible, though you can of course only vote once, so please spread the word!

To vote, click on the logo near the top-right of their website:

Go to the voting site! »

Have a look at the great film they've made about our work, as well as the other films about other great projects around the UK.

 

Press release: Cambridge-based cycling project in finals for national environmental award

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

A Cambridge-based cycling project is in the running for the Future Friendly Award, a national environmental award, and needs votes from the public to win!

CycleStreets enables anyone to plan cycle routes at www.cyclestreets.net from A-B. The system gives three route choices: A quiet route, a fastest route, and a 'balanced' route which is intended to be happy medium between these two.

CycleStreets is one of five groups nationally that have been nominated for the Future Friendly Awards. The winner gets a bursary of £10,000 towards the project.

Simon Nuttall, one of the two creators of CycleStreets, said:

"Funding of £10,000 would make an enormous difference to our work. It would help us expand the project, add much-requested new features, make the system faster, and promote it much more widely. Everyone who cycles in Cambridge can benefit from using the CycleStreets website, so we hope that people will vote in the Future Friendly Awards for what is a Cambridge-based project."

Martin Lucas-Smith, the other lead developer, said:

"To win, CycleStreets needs your vote! Simply go to www.futurefriendly.co.uk, and click on the blue "Future Friendly Awards" link near the top right. Our project is listed together with a Vote button. There is also a great video about our work! Please help the project obtain funding from this national Future Friendly Award scheme."

The site has had almost a quarter of a million journeys planned on it so far, with usage increasing continually. A Cambridge-specific version of the site is at www.cambridge.cyclestreets.net and is the most heavily-used local section.

We hope people will vote for Cambridge-based CycleStreets in the Future Friendly Awards!

Notes:

1) CycleStreets is the UK-wide cycle journey planner. It started as an off-shoot project of Cambridge Cycling Campaign, and is now run as a separate legal entity, on a not-for-profit basis.

2) Voting in the Future Friendly Awards closes at midnight on 19th September.

3) A mobile phone version of CycleStreets is about to be launched. More details at www.cyclestreets.net/mobile

4) Photographs of Simon Nuttall, lead developer, are available at:
http://www.cyclestreets.net/location/19015/

http://www.cyclestreets.net/location/19016/

Click on each image to get the full resolution version. These photos have been given a public-domain license so can be used royalty-free and without the need to credit them.

5) For more information, please contact us.

Future Friendly Awards – please vote for us!

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

We're pleased to announce that we're one of the five national environmental projects nominated for the Future Friendly Awards!

To win, we need as many votes as possible, though you can of course only vote once, so please spread the word!

To vote, click on the logo near the top-right of their website:

Vote now! »

Have a look at the great film they've made about our work, as well as the other films about other great projects around the UK.