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15 Apr 2024

The Rediscovery Centre, the National Centre for the Circular Economy in Ireland, today announced its partnership with Cytech, the internationally recognised training and accreditation scheme for...

2 Apr 2024

Walsall's cycling community has been celebrating a family-owned business which celebrates its 90th anniversary this year.
 

22 Mar 2024

Rob Brown, co-director of Dalby Forest Cycle Hub, a not-for-profit hire scheme has been nominated for the Tourism Superstar 2024 award, run by VisitEngland.

8 Mar 2024

Daniel Blackham, editor of industry magazine BikeBiz, has been writing about his experience of completing the Cytech technical one qualification at training provider Spokes People in Milton...

6 Mar 2024

Cytech partner Activate Cycle Academy, the largest and most recognised training provider of bike maintenance and technical training courses to the UK’s cycle industry, recently welcomed a...

2 Jan 2024

Hudjo is the first online marketplace that lets cyclists park with locals, which relieves the anxiety of parking your bike. 

19 Dec 2023

Bira's CEO, Andrew Goodacre, took the spotlight on BBC Breakfast this week and later spoke with Nicky Campbell on BBC Radio 5 Live, shedding light on the rise in retail crime and shop theft,...

23 Nov 2023

Retail sector leaders have expressed a range of concerns, from taxation to business rates, following the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement this week.

15 Nov 2023

The British Independent Retailers Association (BIRA), which works with over 6,000 independent businesses of all sizes across the UK, has outlined its expectations from the government...

9 Nov 2023

Cytech has been named as the provider of Best Retailer Services in the 2023 BikeBiz Awards, recognising the positive impact of its service to the cycling industry. More than 25,000 Cytech...

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Children will live longer thanks to 'Mini Holland' cycle areas

Posted on in Cycles News , Outdoor News

Children living in the London Borough of Waltham Forest are predicted to see their life expectancy increase by an average of six weeks thanks to the award-winning Mini Holland scheme in the area.

kids on bikes photoResearchers at King's College London predict that the extended life-expectancy could apply to children in the north east London borough who were born in 2013, the year the £30 million Mini Holland scheme was implemented, reports the London Evening Standard.

The study was commissioned by Waltham Forest Council from the Environmental Research Group at King's and is entitled Air Quality: concentrations, exposure and attitudes in Waltham Forest.

The borough's 265,000 residents would benefit, gaining a total of 41,000 years of extra life if air quality continues to improve because of a fall in traffic in residential areas, the study said.

Further rises in life expectancy are expected when a second King's study looks at the rise in "active travel", such as walking and cycling. The environmental research group at King's said Mini Holland could reduce school-run emissions by seven per cent by 2020, when the programme is completed.

King's researcher David Dajnak said: "Waltham Forest's interventions such as the Mini Holland scheme and additional infrastructure aimed at reducing the dominance of traffic are leading the way for healthier, less-polluted cities."

Heidi Alexander, Sadiq Khan's deputy mayor for transport, said: "Waltham Forest is leading the way in creating healthier streets and we want more boroughs to follow their example."

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