• Gormadt
    link
    fedilink
    618 months ago

    Based AF

    With their recent bike lane overhauls this makes total sense to me

    I just wish the NIMBYs in my neck of the woods would realize that such a thing is awesome for people

  • @someguy3
    link
    198 months ago

    Didn’t they do some big bike lanes conversions?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      198 months ago

      Yes, hundreds of miles in a year connecting disparate lanes into a cohesive network.

      Meanwhile NYC failed to put in 50 miles then immediately swept it under the rug and abandoned the plan.

      • Uranium3006
        link
        fedilink
        18 months ago

        I’ve heard NYC had a good cycling culture. what’s it like on the ground there?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          88 months ago

          It’s improving but there are too many bicycle gutters (“share rows”) and our network has a lot of really risky exchanges that you have to cross to get back into protected paths.

          Cyclists are regularly killed in the city by drivers.

    • @kameecoding
      link
      18 months ago

      Not just bikes did a video on it, apparently they did a lot of stuff in a very short amount of time

  • @Winter8593
    link
    38 months ago

    LET’S EFFIN GOOOOO!! I wish we could do something like that here 😭

    • @Pirasp
      link
      16 months ago

      The worst part is, you could. You just don’t. (Not talking about you personally, just your city)

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      318 months ago

      Yeah, wouldn’t want those rule breaking drivers to hit any cyclists. Thankfully more cyclists means fewer drivers.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          27 months ago

          So here’s the thing – NotJustBikes makes this point frequently – you can’t trust that people are going to do the right thing. This is why painted bicycle gutters do not work. The way to combat drivers hitting people is to design the infrastructure in such a way that it’s difficult to do things the wrong and dangerous way. Grade-separated bike paths, level crossings for people not in cars, and lower speeds for cars (forced with narrower roads and traffic calming) are probably the 3 biggest things to contribute to this. From what I saw, Paris has, at the very least, curbs and flexi-posts separating bike lanes which are good starts. They also, admirably, took away some lanes for bikes instead which is GREAT.

          When you introduce these, the danger goes down significantly and people feel a lot more comfortable taking their bike places they might normally take a car to. The reason for this is that motorists feel endangered if they drive faster or in a dangerous way. That’s what we want, because history and traffic studies have shown time and time again that the only time the majority of drivers change their behaviour is when they feel that doing differently will damage their car.

          The final step to ensuring safety is making bike networks that are different from the car networks. Getting people on bikes to their destination faster than cars. Keeping them entirely separate from cars in a lot of their journey. Making cars go around the “long way”, which paradoxically decreases traffic and makes driving an all around nicer experience. Decreasing the conflicts between different types of traffic is ideal.

          There’s lots more besides this, such as pedestrian/cyclist-leading cross signals, Dutch roundabouts which are built in a different way to make biking around them easier and safer, and varying road materials such as brick to make drivers once again feel uncomfortable going fast, there’s TONS of solutions that when combined make travelling safer for ALL.

          Just asking people to follow laws will never be enough. Luckily, that’s not even close to the only option, although it might be hard to imagine for North Americans.