The 'cupboard' layout (in illustration below) seems to have been designer by someone who has never tried to store a bicycle vertically. ...
The words next to that picture say:
When designing the new Intercity Express Passenger (IEP▸ ) train, DCA consulted not only user groups but also the Cycle Rail Working Group. The result is a flexible storage space for cycles that includes drop-down shelves for luggage or folding cycle storage, which both the rail industry and stake- holders are happy with.
The outer cycle may be swivelled to the side to allow the inner one to be removed and the central divider folds out of the way to permit the two shelves to be folded down. The doors are intended to be closed during travel but not locked.
So I guess if you wish to disagree, you need to find out who or what this Cycle Rail Working Group are. Well, they say:
The Cycle Rail Working Group is a cross industry working group that encourages implementation and best practise development of strategic policy in relation to the delivery of cycle-rail integration. The Group is Chaired by Phillip Darnton, Bicycle Association, and the secretariat role is fulfilled by ATOC» . Group members include:
Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC)
Network Rail
Transport for London
Department for Transport
Passenger Transport Executive Group
UK▸ Cycling Alliance, represented by Sustrans
Passenger Focus
Rail Safety Standards Board
English Heritage
It does look a bit light on the cyclists' side, doesn't it?
The friend I mentioned upthread who got a cab ride in a Pendolino was involved in the Cycle Rail Working Group, in a minor way. She says this about it ("darksiders" is jargon for people who ride recumbent cycles) (I've copy-pasted her message to me without alteration save for asterisking the other name, not that he'd really be identifiable anyway):
My involvement was fairly last-minute, when they realised it would be a good idea to have some funny-shaped bikes and asked around the local darksiders (I tried to recruit ********, as a prime example of a seriously disabled person who uses a cycle as a mobility aid, but unfortunately he couldn't make it). So I don't know the wider context beyond the morning we spent in an industrial unit in Warwick with a model of the IEP's interior.
I think it says a lot that by the time any cyclists were involved the design had been finalised to the point where the space couldn't be anything other than dangly, and that they genuinely thought we'd be pleased with what they'd come up with.
So, we spent a morning experimenting with various permutations of bikes in the bike space, tested the Brompton capacity of the Luggage racks, ease of loading/unloading bikes in the vestibule and so on. We also talked a fair bit about
TOC▸ procedures, and how those can be as important as physical design. For example, they'd come up with a cunning hoop to lock our bikes to (that could be released by train staff if necessary). We said we'd rather a cycle reservation automatically reserved the seat nearest the bike space so we could easily keep an eye on it and be there to play tetris when another cyclist got on. And stressed the importance of knowing where to stand on the platform before the train arrives. That sort of thing.
The main feedback I had on the bike space was that requiring people to lift bikes is inherently discriminatory to the disabled, women and children (nobody seems to have thought about children having bikes, or how that works when travelling as a family if the bike spaces are spread throughout the train), and that fixed hook positions mean that some combinations of bike won't tessellate. I suggested that since there are structural elements that mean they're stuck with the dangly design, they should go away and come up with movable hooks, and add some tie-down points for strapping things like removed wheels in place.
(I also took my cyclist hat off and had a conversation about wheelchairs and toilets and door controls and things. It's fair to say they've done a reasonable job there.)
As for how much weight was given to it, I've no idea. Other than being CCed into a couple of emails from Dave Holladay where he provided references for things, that's all I've heard.
AIUI▸ it was organised by the CTC (David Cox was there, and seemed to be in an organisational role), but I think some Sustrans people were also present (though possibly just in their capacity as cyclists who could easily get to Warwick Parkway).