Danny Yee, an active travel campaigner for cycling campaign group Cyclox looks at a difficult junction for pedestrians and cyclists and says he would not let his child use it to walk to school

Consider the junction where the B4495 (Church Cowley Rd) meets the A4158 (Henley Avenue/Rose Hill).

Is this the worst junction in Oxford?

There are certainly bigger and more prominent junctions, with some pretty awful design features but this junction really does have a special horror to it for anyone trying to get across it on foot.

It is a simple signal-controlled T-junction, with two lane approaches on the larger Henley Avenue and one on Church Cowley Road.

But the striking thing about it is that there are no pedestrian phases.

Crossings are marked, with dropped kerbs and tactiles (tactile paving surface), and two of the three have small islands with reflective wands (too small to hold a child’s bike), but otherwise there’s no protection at all.

Crossing is uncomfortable and stressful for fit and alert adults, and simply not safe for children or slower adults.

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Here the A4158 carries 12,000 plus motor vehicles a day and although the roads have 30mph speed limits, it is common for drivers to exceed that, especially downhill.

There’s also a broad sweeping corner that can be taken at speed, turning left from Henley Avenue into Church Cowley Rd.

The south-eastern crossing of the A4158 lacks even an island.

Here pedestrians have to cross three lanes of (notionally) 30mph motor traffic coming from three different directions (and two cycle lanes, as a extra bonus).

Visibility is not terrible, but it’s twelve metres kerb to kerb, so slower people will be interacting with vehicles they couldn’t possibly have seen (or been seen by) when they stepped onto the carriageway.

It is mind-boggling that this has tactiles marking it as a crossing place for the visually-impaired; that almost feels like a trap.

The other two crossings are not quite so appalling, but crossing the B4495 requires looking over one’s shoulder to check for traffic turning left around a wide, sweeping corner.

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It should be fairly obvious how bad this junction is for cycling.

The worst movement is probably heading straight uphill on the A4158, with motor traffic turning across one at high speed.

The crash record of this junction isn’t that bad — presumably the reason the county has managed to get away with leaving it like this — but that is likely because it is so horrible that people avoid using it: I wouldn’t let my child walk to school if it involved crossing here.

People may be opting, sensibly, to cross the A4158 to the north-west, away from the junction — and there is a large cluster of collisions there.

Clearly this junction needs pedestrian signal phases: as well as helping people on foot, those would allow children and others to push cycles across.

Such signals would only be activated when needed, but would still delay traffic and result in longer queues on the approach roads in peak periods.

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So fixing this junction pretty much requires the adjoining low traffic neighbourhoods as a prerequisite, otherwise that would push more traffic through the Westbury-Church Hill and Cornwallis-Florence Park Road ‘short-cuts’ that avoid this junction.

Cyclox is a charity and works with key decision makers to put cycling on the public agenda.