Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi


I've just moved to East Dulwich from Manchester and I work in Holborn. I've been cycling in to work but yet to work out the best route and have gotten pretty lost quite a few times. I wonder if anyone has any suggestions for a decent route that maybe cuts out some of the obvious main bus routes?


Thanks


Debbie :)

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/43985-best-cycle-route-to-the-city/
Share on other sites

I use main roads to attain maximum speed but I'm travelling before 'crush hour'.

I start from Nunhead, Peckham Rye, Rye Lane, Canal Path until Willowbrook/Trafalgar Avenue.

Old Kent Road, New Kent Road, London Road contraflow, Blackfriars Bridge Road, Blackfriars Bridge, New Bridge Street. Then I guess you could go St Bride Street or Stone Cutter Street up onto Shoe Lane and the Holborn Viaduct.

Well done for trying - it will be the quickest way for you to get to work and get to know London at the same time.


Try here: http://www.southwark.gov.uk/download/downloads/id/289/map_of_the_cycle_routes_in_southwark


For Holburn, you're going to have hit a main road at some point, probably Blackfriar's Bridge Rd. but you can skip Walworth Road and Elephant by using the cycle routes.

Depends if your priority is safety, speed or most direct. I can get you as far as E&C.. Crystal Palace Rd to Adys Rd, Bellenden Rd & Lyndhurst Way to Peckham Rd. Then onto Southampton Way cutting onto Chandler Way and across Burgess Park. Thurlow St to Heygate St gets you to the back of E&C. This is extremely safe and keeps you away from unforgiving traffic. ED to E&C takes me 16m on a really ropey old bike! I would seriously recommend avoiding OKR or Walworth Roads. This is where people regularly die or get seriously injured.
I do: the back route avoiding Walworth Road madness - namely: the downhill joy that is Camberwell Grove, a few clever cut throughs to get me to Wells Way through Burgess park, then join Portland St which runs parallel to Walworth Rd. Then avoid all Old Kent Road / Elephant & Castle chaos by nipping behind the Heygate Estate that is being pulled down, and join the blue bike lane on Southwark Bridge Road to cross Southwark Bridge - by far the safest bridge in my opinion as the cycle lane is demarcated by a 2 ft ridge. Then up along past St Paul's, lovely quiet Carter Lane - crossing Ludgate Circus and join Chancery Lane to bring me to Holborn. I am not a racer or keen on getting there the fastest. I love my quiet (no buses) and scenic route and have been doing it three times a week for three years. Very happy to show you the route one morning, I leave at 9am three times a week, am near Goose Green. Let me know.
I find google maps directions quite useful for cycling usually, but on this occasion they don't suggest the route that others have mentioned above, which is basically what I do as well, taking the E&C bypass and backstreets to avoid Walworth Road and the roundabout. I think that is the route that TFL suggest on their journey planner though.
I do a variation of most of the above routes. It's pretty safe most of the way on the backroads. I use Blackfriars Bridge. The bridge itself is fine but you need to be very careful up to Ludgate Circus. I've tried Southwark Bridge but I think the traffic is worse once you get to the other side. I work in Farringdon (near Holborn). I'd be happy to ride with you one morning. Some mornings I leave at 8.20am or 9am if I do school drop off. It takes about 40 minutes at a leisurely pace.
I don't blame you, I tried using the new maps interface to do the same thing and gave up, the interface is practically unusable. I tried on classic maps (which you can revert to from the main maps page, before you click to create a map, using the tiny little question mark on the bottom right) but it didn't seem to be able to share it without attaching my google profile. Well done for getting as far as you did!

damzel Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> worldwiser has given me great ideas for a new

> route in but does anyone know if you can cycle

> north on Wells Road? It's off of Southampton Way

> en-route to Burgess Park. Looking at Google

> street view, it looks like it's one-way southbound

> but the image is 2 years old


Wells Way is both ways for most of it, except small section near Southampton Row, which you have to go Northbound along 'Cottage Green' to join the two direction section. Southbound it is Wells Way all the way.

I join the Cottage Green road from Harris Street - which is a cycle path that runs across the front of a Housing Office (coming from Benhill Road) thus avoiding Southampton Way completely. A cycle traffic light takes you across Southampton Row to join Cottage Green. You get me? Makes sense on a map - just about.

Thanks everyone that is really helpful, and the offers to ride together to find the route the first time are a great idea. I have to be at the office for nine though so if anyone ever goes early enough please let me know of you dint mind me following! Thanks again everyone. East dulwich us clearly a brill place to live.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • People already have....
    • Thankyou so so much tam. Your def a at angle. I was so so worried. Your a good man, we need more like your good self in the world.  Thankyou for the bottom of my heart. Pepper is pleased to be back
    • I have your cat , she’s fine , you can phone me on 07883 065 076 , I’m still up and can bring her to you now (1.15 AM Sunday) if not tonight then tomorrow afternoon or evening ? I’ve DM’d you in here as well 
    • This week's edition of The Briefing Room I found really useful and impressively informative on the training aspect.  David Aaronovitch has come a long way since his University Challenge day. 😉  It's available to hear online or download as mp3. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002n7wv In a few days time resident doctors -who used to be known as junior doctors - were meant to be going on strike. This would be the 14th strike by the doctors’ union since March 2023. The ostensible reason was pay but now the dispute may be over without more increases to salary levels. The Government has instead made an offer to do something about the other big issue for early career doctors - working conditions and specialist training places. David Aaronovitch and guests discuss what's going on and ask what the problem is with the way we in Britain train our doctors? Guests: Hugh Pym, BBC Health Editor Sir Andrew Goddard, Consultant Gastroenterologist Professor Martin McKee, Professor of European Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Mark Dayan, Policy Analyst, Nuffield Trust. Presenter: David Aaronovitch Producers: Caroline Bayley, Kirsteen Knight, Cordelia Hemming Production Co-ordinator: Maria Ogundele Sound Engineers: Michael Regaard, Gareth Jones Editor: Richard Vadon  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...