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CYCLING FOR WOMEN
NEWSLETTERS
Newsletter
One May-June 2004 (pdf 456 kb)
Newsletter
Two July-September 2004 (pdf 661 kb)
Factsheet
1: Helmets (Word doc 33 kb)
THE PROJECT
Cycling for Women was a year-long pilot project based in Camden and Lambeth seeking to understand and begin to address the reasons why comparatively few women compared with men cycle as a means of transport in London. This highly successful project ended in December 2004, but Women’s Design Service would be very interested in developing this approach with other local authorities who would like to encourage more women to cycle. Please contact us at info@wds.org.uk.
The project used 'action research' methods as well as traditional research to understand gender issues relating to cycling and the urban environment. The project aimed to encourage and enable more women to cycle, and to disseminate good practice to policy-makers and practitioners in order to raise the status of cycling and encourage more cycling as a healthy means of transport. The project is funded by the New Opportunities Fund via the SEED programme, and supported by a range of project partners.
ACTION RESEARCH AND PRACTICAL ACTIVITIES
Two groups of women were kitted out with equipment and provided
with training to enable them to cycle as a means of transport, and
as a way of improving fitness and health. The women have reported
back at regular intervals over several months to provide a detailed
qualitative insight into the factors that affect the frequency and
distance of journeys made by bike by new female cyclists in an urban
environment.
At the end of the project the women were offered the equipment loaned
to them by WDS at a discounted price in order that their cycling
can be sustained.
Maintenance classes and on-road training for women who can ride
a bike (but not confidently in traffic and therefore not as a means
of transport) have complemented the action research groups in obtaining
'before' and 'after' results for attitudes towards cycling and the
ability to cycle. WDS has held three cycle maintenance workshops
in Camden and three in Lambeth, plus holding an additional six on-road
group cycle training sessions in each borough for 60 women (groups
consisted of between three and five women).
The participants of all these activities have been recruited from
a range of sources, including clients and staff of local community
groups, and contacts via cycling organisations such as the London
Cycling Campaign, Sustrans and the CTC (Cyclists' Touring Club -
the UK's national cyclists' organisation). The project has achieved
a great deal of coverage in local papers as well as specialist publications,
resulting in a range of different women coming forward to be involved.
FOCUS GROUPS AND SURVEY WORK
Over 100 women were surveyed on their opinions of cycling and focus
groups were held to gain a deeper insight to attitudes towards and
barriers against cycling for women. WDS will be investigating options
that women come up with that would enable more women to cycle as
a means of transport.
All expenses of participants were paid by WDS and women were able
to meet other women and share experiences and perceptions of cycling
and cyclists.
POLICY
Cycling for Women has aimed to feed into policies on transport,
health and gender in order to make cycling a more attractive option
for women and indeed the population as a whole. WDS hopes to inform
and influence the formulation and implementation of policy at the
local, regional and national levels so that cycling gains status
as a serious transport option. WDS hopes that we can contribute
to achieving an increase in cycling as a means of transport where
previously car journeys were made or women were forced to rely upon
poor public transport.
Cycling is good for physical health and mental well-being and can
form an easy and convenient part of a healthy lifestyle. We hope
that health policies can take cycling more seriously and tie-in
with transport policies to enable all people to feel safer and more
confident about cycling as a means of transport.
DID YOU KNOW THAT.....?
In places such as the Netherlands, Germany, York and Cambridge where
cycling enjoys a higher proportion of utility journeys than the
UK average people who cycle more accurately reflect the population
as a whole: more women and older people cycle.
One in ten children and one in five adults in Britain are obese,
which makes the UK the fattest nation in the EU.
Research by the former Department of Environment, Transport and
the regions (DETR) between 1986 and 1996 showed that cycling accounted
for only 1% of passenger transport
DETR figures for 1995/97 show that on average, men make about two
and a half times as many bicycle trips as women, and cycle about
four times as far.
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