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North American cities need to push for secure bicycle parking

momentummag.com /north-american-cities-need-to-push-for-secure-bicycle-parking/

Over the last few months, there has been a steady stream of photos and videos showcasing the world’s largest bicycle parking garage that opened in Amsterdam. This facility, which is completely free for daily use under 24 hours, and this massive investment by the municipal government, is not simply to benefit those who ride bicycles.

13 comments
  • I don't think parking would solve anything since there's nowhere to actually ride the bicycle...

    What we need is a complete reimagining of transportation. Instead of bicycle parking:

    • replace stroads with pedestrian/bicycle only streets
    • run trains to popular destinations in larger cities, and through downtowns of smaller cities
    • move car traffic to go around cities instead of through them
    • increase gas taxes and reduce mass transit fare

    For example, my city has a handful of train lines, but they don't go to many of the tourist-friendly destinations. I live near a lot of ski resorts, and none have a decent way to get there via mass transit. Here's what you need to do to get to the ski resort from the airport:

    1. light rail line 1
    2. light rail line 2
    3. bus line 1
    4. bus line 2

    And from anywhere outside the city center, replace 1 with the commuter rail.

    Sounds decent, right? Wrong. I work at the end of bus line 1 (huge business park, and tons of traffic at the highway intersection there), and it would take 1.5-2 hours to get to my office from the airport via transit, vs 25 min by car. I think there's a shuttle from the airport, but transit really should be able to handle it.

    If we replaced 2-3 with a dedicated train or BRT line, that would cut transit time in half. Traffic can get awful along the highways, and this could bypass that for commuters.

    So what is the transportation authority's solution? Expand the highway so we can make that 25 min trip time more consistent (it's ~35 min in traffic).

    If my city said I could have a bicycle parking garage anywhere in the city for free, I wouldn't know where to put it because there's no real hub for cyclists. The only people who ride in my area are either hobbyists getting exercise, homeless people, and children. Nobody rides for transportation because that's a recipe for death. There are plenty of bicycle paths, but they don't connect to anything interesting so they're mostly useful for recreation.

    Maybe it would work in NYC or Toronto or something, but there's so much more groundwork needed in most of NA before cycling infrastructure is a relevant discussion. I can park my bike in my office or ulock it to a street sign, but I need a way to get there first.

13 comments