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Sustrans (/ ˈ s u s t r æ n s / SUS-trans) is a United Kingdom-based walking, wheeling and cycling charity, and the custodian of the National Cycle Network. Its flagship project is the National Cycle Network , which has created 12,763 miles (20,540 kilometres) [ 2 ] of signed cycle routes throughout the United Kingdom, including 5,273 mi ...
This is a list of routes on Sustrans's National Cycle Network within the United Kingdom. This transport-related list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items.
This is a list of cycle routes in London that have been waymarked with formal route signage include 'Cycleways' (including 'Cycle Superhighways' and 'Quietways) and the older London Cycle Network, all designated by the local government body Transport for London (TfL), National Cycle Network routes designated by the sustainable transport charity Sustrans, and miscellaneous 'Greenways' created ...
It was built by the cycling charity Sustrans between 1979 and 1986, which leased a five-mile (8.0 km) stretch near Saltford, with the help of the then Avon County Council, and using volunteers turned it into its first cycleway.
National Cycle Network (NCN) Route 76 is a Sustrans National Route that runs from Berwick-upon-Tweed to Kirkcaldy. The route is 168 miles (270 km) in length and is fully open and signed in both directions. Between Dunbar and Kirkcaldy the route is known as the Round the Forth. [1]
Zoe Banks Gross, from walking and cycling charity Sustrans, called the group "a shining example" of the importance of safe places to be outdoors. Ms Brown, an events manager, grew up in the ...
The Pennine Cycleway is a Sustrans-sponsored route in the Pennines range in northern England, an area often called the "backbone of England". The route passes through the counties of Derbyshire, West Yorkshire, Lancashire, North Yorkshire, Cumbria and Northumberland. It is part of the National Cycle Network (NCN). Sustrans founder John Grimshaw ...
Sustrans state that it is the UK's most popular challenge cycle route, [1] it is designed for the whole range of cyclists, from families to cycling club riders. Although a challenge with some hard climbs—the highest point being over 609 m (1,998 ft) [1] —the C2C is completed by an average of between 12,800 and 15,000 cyclists every year.