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Transport for London

Danger lurks close to home for London road users

17 July 2006

A hard hitting new advertising campaign, which urges road users to take as much care on their routine journeys as they do on unfamiliar ones, launches in cinemas throughout the capital today.

The Transport for London (TfL) road safety advert - called 'Losing Control' - will air on television and in cinemas throughout the capital during the next six weeks.

It aims to alert people to the fact that most collisions happen within three miles of home, and urges motorcyclists and other road users to drive on the roads they know with as much caution as they would on unfamiliar ones.

The ad takes viewers through the start of a motorcyclist's day. From the alarm that always wakes him, to the cereal he never finishes, the ad shows the biker going through the routines that make up the start of his day and his ride into work.

Riding past the familiar sights of the car that never moves and the kids on the school run, the voiceover goes on to list; "The door you see too late. The lamppost you slam in to. The legs you'll never use again. The day you went to work."

Jenny Jones, Mayor's Road Safety Ambassador, said: "It makes sense to be constantly alert when you are driving, for yourself and other road users. When at speed, and when in control of a large machine, it only takes a brief lapse of concentration for terrible things to happen."

Chris Lines, Head of the London Road Safety Unit at TfL said: "In the past five years TfL's road safety improvements and campaigns have contributed to a 40 per cent reduction in the number of people killed or seriously injured on London's roads.

"This is an excellent achievement, but there is still a lot to do - 214 people were killed on London's roads in 2005, and 44 of them were powered two wheeler riders.

"The new advertising campaign aims to alert all road users to the fact that the majority of collisions happen within three miles of home, and to take care on the roads no matter how familiar their journey is."

Visitors to the British International Motor Show, which opens to the public on 19 July, will have the opportunity to see the new advert on the 'Looked but didn't see' stand.

Organised in partnership with TfL, the Metropolitan Police Service and the City of London Police, the stand also features a graphic reconstruction of a crash scene between a car and a motorbike, which shows one of the most common causes of motorcycle collisions in the capital - one where the driver has failed to see the motorcyclist and has turned right across their path.

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