Halifax Courier

We’re ready to enjoy the outdoor life

Cycling and walking is booming

- Ian Hirst

WALKERS AND cyclists have been putting their best feet and wheels forward to enjoy Calderdale’s routes.

The number of trips recorded on West Yorkshire Combined Authority’s CityConnec­t ‘off-highway’ cycling and walking routes increased by 60 per cent during the last six months of 2020.

Figures also show that increases in active travel seen in West Yorkshire during the first phases of the Covid-19 pandemic in Spring 2020 have remained strong, even in the winter months.

The routes monitored for these latest user figures included the resurfaced towpaths on Rochdale Canal from Sowerby Bridge to Todmorden, Calder & Hebble Navigation from Salterhebb­le to Brighouse and the Huddersfie­ld Narrow Canal.

Councillor Kim Groves, Chair of the West Yorkshire Combined Authority Transport Committee, said: “We’re really proud of our CityConnec­t walking and cycling infrastruc­ture, and these increases in user numbers on our more local, offhighway routes are absolutely fantastic.

“We know many people having been getting outdoors more for exercise during the COVID-19 pandemic, but it’s great to see so many have been using our routes during this time.

“Encouragin­g more people to adopt active travel into their everyday lives is a big part of the Combined Authority’s vision for the future of travel in West Yorkshire, laid out in our Connectivi­ty Infrastruc­ture Plan.

“Our aim is to see communitie­s better linked by an integrated network of local transport, walking and cycling options, and CityConnec­t routes will have a big role to play in making that a reality.”

November showed the most impressive results for the 2020 recording period, with a massive 126 per cent increase in cycling trips.

A total of 17,553 trips were made on these routes, where new or improved infrastruc­ture have been built away from roads, in November 2020, compared with 7,765 trips in 2019.

Figures taken from automatic cycle counters along five key routes delivered by CityConnec­t show that from July to December 2020, a total of 140,408 trips were made on the off-highway infrastruc­ture – up from 87,940 over the same period in 2019, or a 60% increase.

Of these off-highway trips a total of 50,741 were recorded over the weekend, representi­ng an 89% increase on the 26,790 weekend trips recorded for the same six-month period in 2019.

This boost in weekend journeys highlights the increased use of cycling and walking routes for leisure and exercise during the Covid-19 pandemic, and an indication that people are exploring their local areas more by foot and by bike in their leisure time.

The figures also confirm that the Combined Authority’s aim to significan­tly increase active travel across the region, as set out in its Transport Strategy 2040 and the recently published Connectivi­ty Infrastruc­ture Plan, as well as in its response to the climate emergency, can be realised with the provision of suitable walking and cycling infrastruc­ture.

The Combined Authority is working alongside a wide range of partners to ensure the Leeds City Region is a net zero carbon economy by 2038 and a key part of this will involve increasing levels of walking, cycling and use of public transport. The mid-term target is to see 300% more trips by bike by 2027.

The Connectivi­ty Infrastruc­ture Plan sets out a long-term transport infrastruc­ture investment programme for West Yorkshire, covering the next 20 years. It identifies a range of options to create an integrated network that brings together walking and cycling, rail, bus and a new mass transit system across the region.

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