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Thanks for this; will take a careful look and respond. My immediate interest is from Vauxhall onwards since I cycle via Herne Hill now because Camberwell New Road is so unpleasant.


Immediate thoughts are that I am very glad to see right turns being proposed along Vauxhall Bridge Road. I definitely prefer option 2 as far as going over Vauxhall Bridge. I would far rather share a wider space with a few buses than end up on a shared pavement with pedestrians running for trains and dodging around walkers into the cycle lane. Flus for those of us who want to filter over to turn right along South Lambeth Road, it will be easier to do so. The new 'early bird' lights only help if you arrive at a point where the lights are red. If you are in free flowing traffic, getting off the pavement and over will be tricky.


I'd also prefer the road option for the gyratory but could see that less confident cyclists might prefer the shared footpath option.


I am not convinced by it stopping at Neathouse Place as it does. It handholds and then dumps cyclists at the start of the horrible one way system. There is no easy/direct way to get to the western end of Victoria St on two wheels. It's either taking your chances with multiple lanes of traffic around Bressenden Place, going on a detour through the back streets round St Vincent Square (incidentally also full of one-way streets) or getting off the bike and manoeuvring it through already crowded pavements.


Am less familiar cycling the roads around Peckham but it does seem to address the bits that I've noticed weren't great in the past. It might make me covert my route! How well does it link up with the old canal path etc?

Just got the leaflet for this through my door. The phrase I'm worried about is "new mandatory cycle lanes". What does "mandatory" mean? On days when I feel sprightly I happily bike round Vauxhall Cross on the road without using the poorly-designed cycle "solution". Ditto for the Elephant. Is this now a proposal to prevent cyclists from using stretches of road which are deemed (by non-cyclists) to be "too dangerous", and instead to use the "mandatory" cycle solution? That would be a terrifying prospect. I emailed the consultation email address two days ago to ask about this, but so far have not received a reply.
Don't worry; a mandatory cycle lane has a solid white line which motorised vehicles aren't allowed into and, I believe , could be penalised for. An advisory cycle lane has a striped line and vehicles can use. They're not to do with whether cyclists have to use them. Having said that, in practice there's no real difference. Motorcycles still end up using the mandatory lane on the Embankment and cars park in the one at Battersea Park.
  • 6 months later...

The consultation response is now available from http://consultations.tfl.gov.uk/cycling/cs5


TfL has now "decided to substantially recast the previous proposals for some sections of CS5", which means that, up to the Oval, quite a lot of the changes have been abandoned or postponed. But not the 20mph limit in Camberwell (the town centre and Peckham High Street/Peckham Road), which will be going ahead.


From the Oval to the centre of town, including the Vauxhall Gyratory, all the plans are back on the drawing board, and there'll apparently be another consultation on those later. That means the really horrid bits are going to stay horrid for a while longer, but at least they won't be getting worse.

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    • Well why don’t you start totally backwards and have an idea as to what nursery and primary schools you want to target - plenty of good schools as you know each offering their own take.  large home - what are we talking about here 4/5 beds I assume with a large garden. North Dulwich Triangle - are you talking about Half Moon Lane and up to Herne Hill plus the other side say Stradella Road etc but don’t think your budget would stretch that far ! So really you want to reproduce what you have in and  around Abbeyville Road but  in Dulwich area to access both the good private and  state schools  - use to Live in Rodenhurst Road years ago - now they are nice big house with good gardens. How long do you want to commute to get to the City.? I assume you want to aces the city via ED Station or ND station and Denmark Hill Station. I know some people who actually cycle to work in the city - faster and not trapped in carriage like a sardine.! One would hope for the money you are considering spending, you won’t be undergoing major works. Dulwich Estate are not known to be the easiest to deal with and my recommendation if you are gonna be knocking down walls, building out or up is to get your self a good surveyor who is use to dealing with Dulwich Estate. My other suggestion would be to try out the trains in rush hour or when ever you both need to get into the City to work. Go walk in Dulwich Park and talk to the locals - that would give you an idea as well or do you have friends living locally. Houses around Telegraph Hill area would tick the boxes  and although limited with schooling might be OK. Good schools but not as much choice as Dulwich. To be perfectly  honest, with that budget and given the ages of your children why don’t you move to the country. -  much better for bringing up kids, commute would prob be under an hour depending on how far and which county. Your kids are still young so really education atm is not paramount. If moving to the country is too far a jump  then why don’t you consider maybe Beckenham or Bromley - lovely areas there as well. schools all decent to. Wishing you the best in your journey.    
    • I'd try the Dulwich Village or "North Dulwich Triangle" forums for more local knowledge but I don't think those areas compare to Abeville Road at all. It will be quite a different lifestyle.
    • Yes, Dulwich Village commands a premium and justifiably so given access to the City via London Bridge plus the top rate schools within walking distance.  The bus services are really good also - 37, 42 and P4. The P4 is useful for connecting to the Victoria line at Brixton. It's worthwhile waiting for the right property. I know of one which will be coming on the market in a few weeks - 4 bedrooms and south facing garden circa £2.5m.
    • This is an utterly foolish and alarmist statement, completely at odds with reality.
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