It’s possible to have too many signs. Cycle into London’s Rotherhithe Tunnel, for example, and you have to read around 14 signs at the entrance in the few trafficharassed seconds of your approach. (Plus there’s a programmable text display in case of a one-off incident – burst main, escaped zebra, etc.)
Deciphering this is even tougher for drivers – how can they possibly read them all while they’re on the phone? At least, in a decluttering bid, the sign saying no explosives has been removed, so you’re okay with that jal frezi in the panniers.
But cycle routes invariably suffer from the opposite signage problem: too few, too small, too unfit for purpose. (Coincidentally, the same three issues that annoy many women browsing femalespecific cycling clothes.)
Too few. Typically, just…
