Tributes left at the scene A SEA of floral tributes has been left in memory of a man killed in a crash on Great Horton Road. Emergency services were called to the scene, near the University of Bradford, at around 5.45pm on Monday, to reports of a collision between a car and a quad bike. The rider of the quad bike was travelling up Great Horton Road, away from Bradford city centre and there was a collision with a VW Caddy. The 31-year-old male rider, who was known as Kiki or Keeks , suffered serious injuries and was pronounced dead a short time later.
The rider of the quad bike was travelling up Great Horton Road, away from Bradford City Centre and there was a collision with a VW Caddy. The rider, from Bradford, and who has been named as Kiki/Keeks on social media, suffered serious injuries and was pronounced dead a short time later. Anyone who would like to pay tribute or offer their condolences is invited to leave a message on this page. To add your own contribution, click the red Add your contribution now button below. There may be a slight delay in your messages appearing on the page as they must first be approved by Telegraph & Argus staff.
BRADFORD city centre is becoming overloaded with low cost flats, and planners will no longer push for city apartment schemes to include affordable housing. A planning meeting this week heard that the centre already had a large amount of cheap flats - with some going to market for as cheap as £5,000. And one developer said these low cost flats were not painting Bradford in a good light. Bradford Council usually requires any major housing development to include an amount of affordable housing - making it easier for people who cannot afford market housing to find a home. Often developers have to show that 20 per cent of housing will be affordable to get planning permission.
Is your hairdresser one of the best in Bradford? ON Monday hairdressers across Bradford reopened their doors after being closed for more than three months. Since Monday morning, barbers and stylists have been hard at work taming all manner of lockdown locks, including untamed mops, majorly exposed roots, and botched DIY-dos. Many people have gone months without a trim, and with such demand many salons have been booked well in advance as people aimed for a fresh cut as soon as possible. While some lucky souls were first through the door for a cut and colour, short back and sides or even a totally new look, many people are still waiting for their appointments.