WALK, CYCLE, ENJOY, BIGGLESWADE
Here at Biggleswade Living Streets, our volunteers have seen the benefits to health and wellbeing from active travel, as well as the potential savings to our public health departments if we can reduce the load from health problems associated with a sedentary lifestyle. We aim to provide high quality complementarity measures (that we are not getting from the local authorities), and to support and campaign for changes to infrastructure that our town so desperately needs to make walking and cycling a 'normal' transport choice for short journeys.
LET'S WALK, CYCLE, ENJOY, BIGGLESWADE!
If anyone can help, has any advice or can link us up with existing groups we'd be very grateful, so please do get in touch.
High quality places that promote active travel can increase our emotional wellbeing and satisfaction, increase our energy levels and make people happier, reducing anger, anxiety, stress, and fear. Daily activity through walking and cycling have also been shown to reduce the risk of Type 2 diabetes by 35-50%, heart disease by 20-35% and death by 20-35% (source: Department of Health, 2011).
By making it easier to move around, improving the options available and catering for a wider range of needs, purpose built infrastructure for walking and cycling will provide more opportunities for people to socialise, making our neighbourhoods more attractive to be in, and our shopping areas busier with local people. Improving high streets for walking and cycling led to a 216% increase in people stopping, sitting or socialising in London (source: Carmona et al. 2018).
It has been demonstrated that people who walk or cycle spend more in the local community. This would benefit the town centre and support the success of existing and new local businesses. Over a month, people who walk to the high street spend up to 40% more than people who drive to the high street (source: TfL, 2013).
At a national level, the transport sector is the highest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions – changing journeys under 3 miles to active travel can make a big difference. Improving choices for people to travel by walking, cycling and public transport reduces CO2 emissions, improves air quality, and reduces noise pollution, creating a more enjoyable environment to be in. For example, people who cycle have 84% lower CO2 emissions from all daily travel than non-cyclists (source: University of Oxford’s Transport Studies Unit, 2021)
As Biggleswade grows, improvements to our highway network will provide opportunities for improving movement between new developments to the east and north of Biggleswade and the town centre, railways station and local amenities, which will reduce vehicle traffic; give better and more attractive opportunities for walking and cycling, as well as better access to green space and nature, that becomes increasingly more distant from the older parts of town.
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