Longcliffe Quarries bring Road Safety Week messages to life
Primary and secondary pupils from two local schools learn the importance of road safety around HGVs
BUILDING on the success of events run over the last three national Road Safety Weeks, Longcliffe Quarries Ltd have delivered two hard-hitting and interactive activities for local primary and secondary school pupils.
The first event was held – for the first time – on site at Longcliffe’s Curzon Lodge Transport Depot, where the company’s fleet of more than 40 HGVs is based. In another first for Longcliffe, this time the event was held for primary school pupils.
More than 45 Year 3 to Year 6 pupils (aged 7–11) from Cromford Primary School came to the site for a morning of practical exercises to help them learn the importance of safety around large road vehicles.
Having experienced two road safety incidents involving pupils earlier this year, Road Safety Week was an important opportunity for the school to reinforce valuable road safety messages.
Pupils were taken through an exercise to demonstrate blind spots around lorries and to educate on safe road crossing. They also took part in a quiz to check the safety messages had sunk in; and the winners were given Longcliffe ‘goodie’ bags.
‘We are very grateful to Longcliffe for running this practical and impactful event,’ said headteacher Ian Wilson. ‘As a school, we are trying to increase road safety around the school as two of our older students were hit by a car earlier in the year.
‘We are doing traffic work in school and also encouraging students to use scooters and bikes to travel to school to reduce the amount of car traffic. The Longcliffe event complements and reinforces the messages we are trying to embed with the students.’
For the second event, the Longcliffe team took a 44-tonne articulated tanker lorry and a 32-tonne rigid tipper truck to Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School (QEGS) in Ashbourne, to deliver road safety messages to 240 Year 7 pupils. Longcliffe were invited back to this school having hosted a very successful session there in 2023.
QEGS teacher Kate Morgan said: ‘We have a lot of large vehicles on the roads around Ashbourne. This demonstration of blind spots and stopping distances helps students understand the importance of respecting the roads and keeping themselves safe. It was so much more impactful than anything we could do in class. Thank you Longcliffe.’
The event focused on safety for vulnerable road users, such as pedestrians and cyclists, who account for nearly half of all fatalities on the UK’s roads.
Longcliffe’s educational session at QEGS included an opportunity to sit in the lorry driver’s cab, providing the young students with an impactful first-hand view of visibility limitations and blind spots. The event also saw the whole of Year 7 working through an exercise around the ‘tipper’ lorry to understand how to be as safe as possible as a pedestrian.
Tony Woodroffe, event organizer and Longcliffe’s head of health and safety, remarked: ‘Safety is Longcliffe’s priority, whether that’s on our sites or out on the road with our fleet. Giving these students an insight into the lorry driver’s perspective is a powerful way of conveying safety messages for them when they are walking or cycling.’
All students were presented with a ‘Be Safe, Be Seen’ high-visibility waistcoat to take home.

