Modal shift to active travel will support decarbonisation, reduce congestion, and improve air quality and health. The Climate Change Committee has identified the need to invest in walking and cycling infrastructure and strengthen other schemes to support active travel modes.
The first Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy (CWIS1) was published in 2017, with the second strategy (CWIS2) expected early in 2022.
This insight paper covers:
- What CWIS1 achieved, and what needs improvement
- The active travel measures introduced as part of the Covid-19 pandemic
- What the 2020 Gear Change report achieved
- What CWIS2 should contain, including its scope, funding and political coordination
This paper has been informed by available published evidence, insight from ICE Fellows, and a roundtable with the Department for Transport and experts in the active travel sector.
Civil engineering insights on UK government cycling and walking strategies
Content type: Policy
Last updated: December 2021
You may also be interested in@headerSize>

- Type
- Webinar
Implementation of TfN's northern transport strategy
This is your chance to influence how Transport for the North (TfN) bring their Strategic Transport Plan to life across the North. Hear from TfN’s interim strategy director Rachel Ford.

- Type
- ICE Community blog
What is people-positive infrastructure?
The Breaking Silos series continues with Serena Gough (ICE) and Helena Du-Roe (CIWEM) exploring how infrastructure can deliver people-positive environments.

- Type
- Lecture
Active mobility: examining the Dutch Model for application in Malaysia
Active mobility in the Netherlands emerged from decades of community advocacy, leadership, and innovative engineering. This presentation examines how grassroots movements and leadership shaped Dutch policies and whether Malaysia's conditions support a shift towards active mobility.