How cycling support created lasting change for Hannah and her son
With support from Clackmannan Development Trust (CDT) through our Cycle Access Fund, Hannah borrowed a suitably set-up bike with a front child seat and a wide double kickstand, took a couple of confidence-building on-road sessions with a CDT tutor, and discovered a routine that works.
She now drops her son with the childminder and cycles on to school – saving more than £80 a month, being more active and planning to get her own bike through cycle to work.
I’ve thoroughly enjoyed going back to cycling to work and really appreciate this opportunity to restart. I’ve gained confidence with my son in the front seat… My son loves the journeys – when he sees his helmet he goes ‘bike!’ and rings the bell as we go
The challenge
Like many new parents, Hannah used to cycle but wasn’t sure how to carry a young child and everyday bags safely and easily.
It’s a common barrier: people often cite inconvenience and no way to carry shopping or luggage as reasons why they don’t cycle. Rising bus fares and inflexible timetables added pressure.
The support
CDT used Cycle Access Fund to build a practical, parent-first offer and then develop it year on year:
- Shared-use fleet (year 1): six bikes (two adult, four children’s) available to loan so residents can try everyday cycling without upfront cost. For Hannah, CDT worked through a few seat options before finding the right front child seat, then added a sturdy double kickstand so the bike stayed upright while she strapped in her son, plus panniers for bags.
- Skills and route confidence: short, targeted on-road sessions with a CDT cycle tutor focused on handling a bike with a child on board and sussing out a real-world route that combined nursery and work. Together they rode and risk-assessed a 4.5km commute – around 75% on shared paths and the remainder on 20mph local roads – turning an impractical walk and costly bus trip into one calm, door-to-door ride.
- Progression to ownership (year 2): when demand grew, CDT used Cycle Access Fund’s Recycled strand to move riders from loan to refurbished ownership. Hannah returned the loan and received a bright yellow recycled bike set up with the same family-friendly tweaks – so the new habit stuck as life changed.
We selected the right seat after a few false starts, fitted a wide double kickstand and panniers, and rode the route together until it felt easy. Now it’s simply how Hannah and her son get to their day
Scott Bamford, Active Travel Co-ordinator at CDT
The impact
- Money saved: £80+ per month compared with previous travel.
- Active travel that fits family life: nursery and work stitched into one journey.
- Confidence and comfort: correct equipment and brief skills support made carrying a child feel safe and manageable.
- A habit that lasts: loan → learning → recycled ownership created a clear, affordable pathway to keep riding.
Scott helped on my first run to school, showing the best route, and my first ride with the seat. I’m now really confident cycling with the front seat
Partner spotlight: Clackmannan Development Trust
CDT’s experience shows how a layered local offer turns interest into everyday journeys:
- 2024-25 (Shared-use): Cycle Access Fund funding enabled a mixed adult/children’s fleet to meet demand. Hannah accessed an adult bike with child seat and stabilising kickstand, plus short on-road support to get started.
- 2025-26 (Recycled): with Cycle Access Fund’s recycled-bike support, CDT could transition keen participants from loan to ownership, keeping momentum high and costs low for families.
This continuity – try it, learn it, own it – keeps people riding and helps community organisations grow what works.
Why it matters
For parents, the difference between cycling and not cycling is often practical, not ideological: Can I carry my child? Will the bike stay upright while I strap them in? Is there a simple route that avoids busy roads?
By combining the right equipment, a short burst of skills support and access to a bike without the upfront cost, Hannah was able to replace a stressful, expensive commute with a reliable, low-cost routine she enjoys, together with her son. The side effects? Lower costs, calmer mornings and a child who loves the ride in all weathers.
If you’re a community partner interested in running shared-use and recycled-bike support locally, our Cycle Access Fund team can help you shape a similar pathway.
A big thanks to SEStran, whose support for Cycle Access Fund made this work possible.