Many bicycle crashes in Mapleton involve predictable patterns—routes where riders are sharing space with cars during commuting hours, school drop-off, or weekend errands.
You may be dealing with one of these scenarios:
- Turning and yielding problems at intersections where a driver misjudges distance or fails to look for cyclists.
- Dooring—a vehicle opens into the bike lane or roadway path, forcing a sudden evasive move.
- Lane position and merging conflicts on roads where drivers shift lanes without giving cyclists enough room.
- Construction and detours that change traffic flow, visibility, and signage clarity.
- Aggressive driving or distracted driving that leads to sudden braking, swerving, or contact.
When you’re evaluating your case, the question isn’t just “who hit who.” It’s whether the other driver’s actions created an unreasonable risk and whether that conduct caused your specific injuries.


