This is a £16m bridge to nowhere, say cyclists

Bike Worcester said it was short-sighted of the county council not to join up existing safe routes for cyclists
- Published
Cyclists wanting to travel on a new £16m walking and cycling bridge into a city centre are left with two choices - join a muddy path or turn back and join what some cyclists claim is a "dangerous" road.
This is because part of the Severn Way path in Worcester, on the Western side of the Kepax Bridge, is a muddy quagmire, impassable even for most people on foot.
The bridge, which crosses the River Severn, was meant to create a figure-of-eight loop to encourage more people to walk and cycle in the city.
But Worcestershire County Council said upgrading the path at the foot of the bridge was never in the scope of the project because it is not a "defined public right of way".
Bike Worcester argues that spending millions on a bridge and not thinking about the wider infrastructure is short-sighted.
Dan Brothwell, chair of the group, said: "It seems like some of the easier bits around the edges, that are actually really important to make [the bridge] a success, have been overlooked."

Daisy Wallis enjoys cycling with her six-year-old son
Daisy Wallis, who lives five minutes from the bridge, said she did not feel safe cycling on the nearby A443 with her six-year-old son.
As a result she said it felt like a "a bridge to nowhere" because they cycle over it and have to turn back again.
"If the county council had managed to finish the muddy bit, then we'd be using it a lot more", she added.

Karen Lewing, a Green Party city councillor, called on the county council to work with its partners to upgrade the path
Karen Lewing, a Green Party city councillor, said the whole project felt "a bit pointless" because of the inaccessible path.
She added: "In the scoping of the project they thought this was on the too hard to do list."
The councillor called on the county council to talk to the Environment Agency and the Severn Rivers Trust about improvements that could be made to the path.
A spokesperson for the council said the Kepax Bridge had been a "huge success" since it opened on 5 December with "many thousands" of people using it.
They added: "The path along the river is prone to flooding, and although it is used by some walkers, it is not a defined public right of way, so is not maintainable by our Public Rights of Way team."
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