What Real Respect for Bicyclists Looks Like

Started by thelakelander, August 30, 2012, 04:36:42 PM

thelakelander

Now thats how you eliminate bike/ped conflicts at major suburban arterial intersections.  To bad it's the Netherlands and not Jacksonville.



full article: http://www.theatlanticcities.com/commute/2012/08/what-real-respent-bicyclists-looks/3094/
"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

Adam W

I posted a video of that earlier on another thread. It's amazing!

Overstreet

Bet they got way more bike traffic and fewer cars.

thelakelander

I'm sure they do. When you put in infrastructure for alternative modes, usage tends to increase. When a routine bike trip turns into a life and death situation, usage falls.
"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

tufsu1

I am involved in a study in Tallahassee that is recommending something similar...an L-shaped bike/ped bridge that corsses the newly widened intersection of Capital Circle and Woodville Highway

Lunican


Adam W

^That level of investment is really impressive. From the picture, it looks like the lanes are going to be either shared with cars or alongside car lanes. It's hard to tell what they will look like - but I really like that foot rest and the pump every mile.

Copenhagen and Amsterdam are so far ahead of the curve when it comes to this sort of thing. Granted, they are very small cities. But I think many of the ideas could be adopted by Jacksonville and other large cities. Hell, Jacksonville has a lot of land - so things like generous bicycle lanes, paths, etc should be easy to achieve.

TheCat

In Bike-Friendly Copenhagen, Highways For Cyclists:
Quote
http://www.npr.org/2012/09/01/160386904/in-bike-friendly-copenhagen-highways-for-cyclists?ps=view&ec=mostpopular

Every day, one-third of the people of Copenhagen ride their bikes to work or school. Collectively, they cycle more than 750,000 miles daily, enough to make it to the moon and back. And city officials want even more people to commute, and over longer distances.

So a network of 26 new bike routes, dubbed "the cycling superhighway," is being built to link the surrounding suburbs to Copenhagen.

Lars Gaardhoj, an official with the Copenhagen capital region, says the routes will be straight and direct.

"It will be very fast for people who use their bike," he says. "This is new because traditionally cycle paths have been placed where there is space for them and the cars didn't run. So now the bike is going to challenge the car."

The first highway, to the busy suburb of Albertslund some 10 miles outside the city, was completed in April.

To test it, I got a rental bike and went out for a ride.

No Place For Slowpokes

One of the first things you learn about these bike lanes is that you have to move in fast. This is not leisurely biking â€" this is serious stuff in Copenhagen.

It's a parallel world of transportation: You've got the cars on the roads and the people on their bikes. There are thousands and thousands of people on their bikes here in this city.


EnlargeCourtesy of Eleanor Beardsley for NPR
NPR reporter Eleanor Beardsley rides in one of the new bike lanes in Copenhagen. The city is building more than two dozen lanes from the suburbs into the city. They cater to cyclists by including such things as rails and footrests at stoplights.
As commuters pour into Copenhaghen on the new highway, I stop biker Cona Endelgo at a red light. Endelgo says he used to drive his car to work, but biking is better.

"It gives you more exercise and motion, and it's more free, and it's quicker. When I pass the harbor, I wave to the cars," he says.

Each mile of bike highway will cost about $1 million. The project is to be financed by the city of Copenhagen and 21 local governments. And in a country where both right- and left-leaning politicians regularly ride bikes to work, it has bilateral support.

Addressing The Needs Of Bikers

Several innovations are being tested, like "green wave" technology, which times traffic lights to suit bikers. If you maintain a certain pace, you can ride all the way through into the city without stopping. There are also footrests with bars to lean on at traffic lights, and a bike pump every mile in case you have a flat.

Outside the city, the pace is slower and people talk to each other as they ride. Jacob Messen, 33, is on his way to a water park with his kids. He says support for the project runs deep.

"Bicycles are a very essential element in most people's lives in Denmark," he says. "We have them as small infants and all the way up through the ages."

He's not kidding. Another rider, 83-year-old Soulva Jensen, is using the highway to visit her daughter in a neighboring town.

"The trains are too much trouble at the moment, so I thought it was easier to take the bike," she says.

Once the highway network is completed, an estimated 15,000 additional people will switch from driving to biking. And that, say officials, will have a direct impact on the environment, public health and finances. The bike highway alone is expected to save Copenhagen's health care system some $60 million a year.

http://www.npr.org/2012/09/01/160386904/in-bike-friendly-copenhagen-highways-for-cyclists?ps=view&ec=mostpopular