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  #1261  
Old Posted May 18, 2016, 4:24 PM
mrnyc mrnyc is online now
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adding bike lanes to calm the most dangerous road in town:





EDITORIAL

Queens Boulevard bike lane is worth a spin

By The Editorial Board May 16, 2016


Watch a child sprint 150 feet across Queens Boulevard, and you know that the street wasn’t built on a human scale.

The street became known as the Boulevard of Death in the 1990s for its high number of pedestrian and vehicular fatalities. In 2015, the boulevard was fatality-free, according to the Department of Transportation. But the boulevard is a focus of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s Vision Zero road-safety initiative, given the 19 total fatalities, including 12 pedestrians, on the boulevard since 2010.


more:
http://www.amny.com/opinion/editoria...pin-1.11803301
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  #1262  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2016, 7:30 PM
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Wheels in motion for 'sky bike' highways in Melbourne's CBD

Read More: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/wh...31-gp7sgz.html

Quote:
A radical plan for a $100 million 'sky bike' super highway for Melbourne CBD cyclists is being examined by the Andrews government's chief infrastructure adviser. Infrastructure Victoria has floated a major plan to extend a network dedicated to bike corridors, including "grade separated" raised sections allowing cyclists to quickly and safely travel through and across the city.

In a major report examining dozens of major project options, Infrastructure Victoria predicted the controversial idea would cut traffic congestion, freeing up space for public transport. "The provision of bicycle highways, especially if they are physically or grade separated, is likely to encourage new cycling trips by cyclists of varying ability and reduce the risk of injuries and fatalities related to crashes." It follows concerns that Melbourne's bicycle corridors end abruptly on the city's edge, with cyclists facing a dangerous journey into the heart of the business district.

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  #1263  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2016, 6:53 PM
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Why Paris Is Building Highways for Bikes

Read More: http://www.citylab.com/commute/2016/...-bikes/489341/

Quote:
.....

Opening last May, the 0.5-mile stretch of freshly paved road alongside the Bassin de l’Arsenal is part of the Réseau express vélo (“REVe”), an initiative to build fast-track bike lanes free of motorized vehicles. It’s only the first section of the soon-to-be 28-mile network of bike highways that will cross the city by 2020.

- In 2015, the city voted unanimously to spend €150 million ($164.5 million) on expanding and improving its biking infrastructure, including REVe (which translates to “dream” in French). Cyclists will benefit from more bike-friendly rules—including the freedom to turn without waiting for a green light at every intersection—as well as new bike stands and two-way bike lanes on one-way streets.

- With these new bike lanes, the city hopes to see daily bike trips increase from 5 to 15 percent by 2020. The initiative will not only build highways for bikes, but it will also double the number of bike lanes from 435 to 870 miles, making the system more efficient and inclusive. And with the creation of 7,000 more advanced stop lines at red lights (with priority given to bikes at every intersection), cyclists won’t be as restricted by car traffic.

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  #1264  
Old Posted Jul 23, 2016, 11:48 PM
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the 2900 mile long east coast bikeway will connect calais, maine to key west, florida:

http://www.ecowatch.com/nations-long...935939819.html
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  #1265  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2016, 1:46 AM
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a different take on urban cycling -- cleveland's dirt bike race track plans run into some political issues:


Cleveland official calls out critics of dirt bike track proposal, accuses them of veiled racism


CLEVELAND, Ohio – After a heated City Council debate last week over a plan to legitimize Cleveland's underground dirt bike culture by building a track in a city park, one city official sounded off on Facebook, calling out critics of the plan for what he described as veiled racism.

In a Facebook post Friday night, Cleveland Community Relations Director Blaine Griffin wrote that he has seen the city throw millions of dollars at skateboard parks, boat docks, rowing sports and bike trails. But when it came to finding a home for dirt bike and BMX enthusiasts -- who currently ride illegally on city streets for lack of a better place -- council members took issue with it, Griffin wrote.

"And because they are young, black and aggressive, people totally demonized the project," he wrote. "They disrespected them and the Councilwoman who tried to find a release valve for these activities. The reason that they gave is because they wanted [their] own personal parks to be fixed. The message that they sent to these young people (Who rarely get involved in the electoral and political process) is, 'The only thing appropriate for you young Black men is an interaction with police, a number and jail.' Listen to Dog Whistle Politics. Race is always lurking in the background."

Griffin went on to say that the group also disrespected Councilwoman Phyllis Cleveland, who had pledged some of her own discretionary funding for the $2 million park proposed for the Marion Motley Playfields in her ward. Griffin pointed out that council etiquette calls for members to support their colleagues' project proposals.

"I guess she is a woman, so people felt free to pick on her," Griffin wrote.

The project is aimed at providing a place for the growing number of dirt bike riders who illegally use city streets and parks to ride dirt bikes and ATVs while performing death-defying stunts.

The park would be built to regulation specifications for motocross. The sport involves motorized dirt bikes, and BMX bikes, which are pedal-operated and designed for tricks.

The park would consist of a quarter-mile loop track and a straight-away track for riders to perform stunts. An amphitheater would be built for spectators, and a separate building would house an area for the riders to learn bike repair.

Mayor Frank Jackson's administrators appeared before council's Committee of the Whole last Wednesday, seeking approval from council to start the bidding process on construction and for a five-year contract for a day-to-day operator.

A group of representatives of the so-called BikeLife culture testified at the hearing that the sport has had a positive influence on thousands of Cleveland youth, and that riders from feuding neighborhood factions have become friends through riding.

But some council members argued that the city should not spend the money on a new park when existing parks, pools and recreation centers are unusable and in desperate need of repair. And they took issue with the notion that the city would expedite a $2 million project catering to a population that is "terrorizing" the streets with their illegal, unlicensed vehicles, while young children have nowhere safe to play.


more:
http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index...lls_out_c.html


* note - cleveland has a very cool indoor mountain bike park now for years - check it out:

https://youtu.be/dFOSDMSXPNA

Last edited by mrnyc; Aug 19, 2016 at 6:15 PM.
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  #1266  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2016, 3:56 PM
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When Cyclists Oppose Bike Lanes

Read More: https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/cyc...ne-plan-madrid

Quote:
Despite little designated infrastructure, bicycle use in Madrid, Spain, has been steadily increasing at a pace of 15 to 20 percent per year since 2008. Yet the city’s plan to build 30 new bike lanes is being met with a chorus of criticism — from cyclists.

- The protesters say bike lanes increase accident risk for cyclists at intersections, pointing to bike lanes located on the right side of the road as especially troublesome with motorists making right turns. Some cyclists are also worried that if they are segregated spatially, they will lose the right to use the main road, whether owing to new regulations or pressure from drivers.

- The opposition ranges from extreme — some brand all bike lanes “death traps” — to moderate. Among the latter is En Bici Por Madrid (EBPM), one of Madrid’s most influential cycling associations. “Bike lanes look good on straight segments, but they create unsafe situations for cyclists at intersections,” writes Miguel Samperio, a member of EBPM, via email. “There are technical solutions, but they come at a prejudice for pedestrians and cyclists.”

- EBPM is also critical of the idea that bikes lanes per se can increase the share of cyclists. “It’s important to eradicate the idea that to promote cycling we have to segregate bicycles in their own lane,” writes Samperio. EBPM has challenged the motto of “Build it and they will come” by citing examples on its website like Stevenage, a British city with a large segregated cycle network that few people use.

- EBPM believes it’s possible to promote cycling without creating segregated bike lanes. “Cities like Florence, in Italy, have increased their share of cyclists without a bike lane network, simply by putting restrictions to traffic and parking,” writes Samperio, echoing the organization’s website. “We have to stop prioritizing motor vehicles and remind drivers that in the city, cars are guests.”

- Opposition to bike lanes by cyclists may seem rare these days, but it actually goes back at least 80 years. In 1934, the first segregated bike lane in London faced strong opposition from cyclists. Those protestors shared a belief with today’s anti-bike lane activists in Madrid: that bike lanes give a false sense of security and curtail the right of cyclists to use the main road. However, a year after the London bike lane was opened, a survey showed that 80 percent of cyclists were satisfied with segregated lanes.

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  #1267  
Old Posted Sep 3, 2016, 8:25 PM
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^Interesting. I always thought of vehicular cycling as an Anglo-American ideology, but I guess it has some adherents on the continent. I wonder how the hilarious #bikelanesaregenocide hashtag (from one of my favorite parody Twitter accounts) translates into Spanish.
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  #1268  
Old Posted Nov 4, 2016, 10:46 PM
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Berkeley’s Revolutionary Bike Plan

Read More: https://systemicfailure.wordpress.co...ary-bike-plan/

Bike Plan PDF: http://www.bikeberkeley.com/wp-conte...Commission.pdf

Quote:
Berkeley could become North America’s first major city to build a comprehensive Dutch-style cycle-track network. For the past two years, city staff has been developing a new Bike Plan, which is set to go before City Council in December.

- If approved, the plan would prioritize the construction of new cycle-tracks in the south campus area, and convert a downtown segment of Milvia into a cycle-track. The plan also calls for cycle-tracks on the major arterials , including Claremont, Telegraph, Shattuck, University, and Adeline. Each those projects would have to go through a “multi-modal” corridor study. Berkeley staff says these studies are needed to accommodate other road users.

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  #1269  
Old Posted Nov 11, 2016, 4:02 PM
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City Streets Makeover Adds Bike Lanes

Read More: http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2016/11/04...dds-bike-lanes

Quote:
Leveraging its High-Impact Paving Program, the City of Milwaukee is rapidly adding new buffered bike lanes and replacing existing worn bike lanes and cross walks on major streets across the city.

The program was started in 2013 to try to stretch existing maintenance funding after years of state cuts in shared revenue to municipalities, and seeks to make quick, relatively low-cost repairs to roadways in dire need of resurfacing. This generally involves milling a couple inches off the existing damaged asphalt surface and adding a new layer of asphalt and pavement markings.

The projects do not repair curbs, gutters and sidewalks as would be done in a typical full reconstruct project. The repairs are designed to last seven to 10 years, and the city has been able to resurface more than 60 miles of streets with the HIPP. Of those 60 miles, approximately 25 percent were local (residential or side) streets.

In 2017 DPW plans to complete approximately 24 miles of streets with the HIPP, of which eight miles will be local. Thanks to the High-Impact Paving Program and the city’s gradual increases in DPW’s capital budget, Milwaukee has reduced the average replacement cycle for roads from 163 years in 2004 down to 58 years. Given that a street should last 25-60 years, depending on if it is constructed with asphalt or concrete, that is about where the replacement cycle should be.

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  #1270  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2016, 2:23 AM
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  #1271  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2016, 3:34 PM
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Bike Lanes May Be The Most Cost-Effective Way To Improve Public Health

https://www.fastcoexist.com/3065591/...-public-health

Quote:
.....

- A new study from researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health shows just how big those benefits can be. Per dollar spent, constructing bike lanes is a cheap way to improve public health.

- For instance back in 2005, New York City spent $10 million on curbing traffic as part of the federally-funded Safe Routes to School program. Sidewalks were widened, bike lanes constructed, and traffic lights re-phased to suit pedestrians. The "net societal benefit" of these changes? The study's authors estimate it to be $230 million.

- To evaluate the costs, the authors first determined that the 45.5 miles of bike lane constructed in New York in 2015, at a cost of just over $8 million, increased the probability of riding a bike by around 9%.

- They then modeled these figures to find out how cost effective more bike lanes would be in the future. Savings on health spending were calculated by estimating the effects of increased physical activity, and better air quality.

- "We conclude that investments in bicycle lanes come with an exceptionally good value because they simultaneously address multiple public health problems,' says the study. "Investments in bike lanes are more cost-effective than the majority of preventive approaches used today." [emphasis added]

.....
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  #1272  
Old Posted Nov 18, 2016, 6:00 PM
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Cross Charlotte Trail:

Right now there are a number of greenways in Charlotte but the Cross Charlotte Trail project aims to connect many of them so people will be able to walk/cycle the entire length of Mecklenburg county. The network will stretch around 40 miles. The entire trail has a 2020 completion date.


Source: Charlotte Five via City of Charlotte

One of the biggest hangups has been how to bridge the Independence/I-277 interchange. Here are a couple renderings:


Source: Charlotte Five via City of Charlotte


Source: Charlotte Five via City of Charlotte
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  #1273  
Old Posted Nov 19, 2016, 2:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M II A II R II K View Post
Bike Lanes May Be The Most Cost-Effective Way To Improve Public Health

https://www.fastcoexist.com/3065591/...-public-health
This very well might be true but bike lanes will be the first thing cut in the Don the Con - Paul Ryan transportation plan.
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  #1274  
Old Posted Nov 20, 2016, 3:14 AM
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Bill to allow NYC cyclists to pass through certain red lights sparks debate

By Vincent Barone vin.barone@amny.com November 15, 2016



Should cyclists be policed as if they were driving cars?

A City Council bill that would allow for cyclists to ride through certain red lights has spurred discussions between Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration, lawmakers and advocates about how cyclists should be treated on city streets.

The bill, introduced earlier this year by Councilman Carlos Menchaca (D-Brooklyn), would permit cyclists to travel through red lights with “Lead Pedestrian Intervals.” Known as LPIs, the intervals extend red lights to give pedestrians several seconds to cross a street ahead of moving traffic.

It might sound like obscure traffic engineering, but it's a riding technique championed by riders.

“Sometimes laws create cultural and behavioral changes,” said Menchaca at a Transportation Committee hearing on the legislation Tuesday. “And sometimes culture points us in the direction of the legislation. This is an example of the latter.”

There are LPIs at almost 1,500 intersections throughout the city, according to the city’s Department of Transportation. It’s a feature that the agency says increases pedestrian visibility and helps keep those walking safe from turning drivers.

Proponents argue that the bill would provide the same safety benefits for cyclists.

“This important bill helps to draw a clearer distinction between cyclists and cars and highlights that [both pedestrians and cyclists] are extremely vulnerable to turning cars at intersections,” said Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez (D-Manhattan), chair of the Transportation Committee.

The bill would require little beyond departing from NYPD traffic policing that, typically, weighs cyclists’ behaviors equally against drivers’. Turning cyclists would still have to yield to pedestrians at affected intersections.

“There already are some exceptions,” said cycling advocate Paco Abraham, comparing traffic rules between cars and bikes. “This is carving out a little more space for that realization that sometimes you’re dealing with apples and oranges.”

Thomas Chan, the NYPD transportation chief, said that the idea of retraining officers to enforce a law only at certain intersections was a concern for the agency.

“We want to ensure that cyclists are safe,” Chan said. “Right now bicycles and vehicles are under the same rules….We have thousands of officers who will have to be retrained. We’re not exactly sure how this will affect enforcement, but we know it will.”

Turning crashes represented 23 percent of bicyclist fatalities in intersections, according to city data between 2006 and 2014. Sean Quinn, the senior director of bicycle and pedestrian programs at the DOT, said the agency supports the bill but wants to settle on exceptions for certain intersections with LPIs.

“The trends are all pointing to the same thing: there are more bicyclists on the streets…” Menchaca countered. “We’re going to have to evolve.”
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  #1275  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2016, 7:01 PM
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‘Mini Holland’ scheme in Walthamstow hailed as major success as traffic falls by half

Read More: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/londo...-a3389936.html

Quote:
Campaigners have called for “mini Holland” walking and cycling schemes to be introduced in towns across Britain after the first London pilot scheme produced dramatic results.

Traffic levels in 12 key roads in the “village” area of Walthamstow fell by 56 per cent, or 10,000 fewer vehicles a day, Waltham Forest council has told residents. The results sparked calls for other cities and towns, including Manchester, and other parts of the capital, such as Southwark, to follow suit. In Walthamstow, partial road closures were introduced from February last year, with the aim of making roads with high levels of “rat-running” safer for pedestrians and cyclists.

Waltham Forest council was one of three boroughs to win about £30 million each to introduce “mini Holland” schemes as part of then mayor Boris Johnson’s plan to take his “cycling revolution” to the suburbs. Cycle-friendly measures are also being introduced in Kingston and Enfield. Provisional results for Walthamstow reveal an overall traffic reduction of 16 per cent, including a slight increase in traffic on two roads bordering the “village”.

Traffic in Hoe Street rose three per cent and 11 per cent in Lea Bridge Road. There were no reported collisions between last September and April, compared with 15 between September 2012 and August 2015. The scheme was strongly backed by residents before its introduction but a minority of businesses and residents protested at the town hall, calling for the roads to be reopened. Full results — including an expected large increase in the number of people cycling and walking — will be released by the council early next year.

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  #1276  
Old Posted Dec 7, 2016, 2:58 AM
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The ‘Peanutabout’ Concept Could Be a Breakthrough for Diagonal Streets

Read More: http://usa.streetsblog.org/2016/12/0...gonal-streets/

Quote:
.....

On Tuesday, the Boston Cyclists Union shared the inspiring back story behind a new concept for the long, complex seven-way intersection created by the acute crossing of Cambridge and Hampshire streets. Like a lot of good ideas in modern American bicycling history, it involves Anne Lusk, a Harvard public health professor who’s been a major brain behind the spread of protected bike lanes in the United States.

- In mid-September, Bike Union executive director Becca Wolfson and representatives of Kittelson met with City of Cambridge staff to present our findings regarding the feasibility of the peanut design and the conceptual rendering for it. The City had considered and rejected as infeasible a roundabout solution for Inman, but had not considered a peanut-style mini-roundabout. The staff were favorably impressed and have since indicated an interest in including this roundabout approach alongside the “Bends” solutions as the pubic process moves forward.

- Bicycles can move through the Square with minimal or no stopping and minimized deflection. By elevating the cycle tracks and using European-style protected crossings, those traveling by bicycle will be much more visible to drivers; oblique or unexpected crossing angles are completely eliminated. It gives Cambridge the chance to be a leader and innovator by installing a first-in-the-nation roundabout with protected bike lanes — something we have yet to see implemented in the U.S.!

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  #1277  
Old Posted Dec 7, 2016, 12:49 PM
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Looks good! Only part that looks jarring is the bikelane-protected car parking. Ought to be the other way 'round.
/annoys me since I see it daily here in Stockholm too.
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  #1278  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2017, 6:37 PM
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Vancouver’s cycling-friendly side streets seen as a key step forward for North American cities

Read More: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/...ticle33469213/

Quote:
For the past decade, Vancouver’s separated bike lanes have continued to generate headlines and heaps of public scorn from conservative Vancouver residents who see them as the most overt example of Big Government’s ongoing “war on the car.”

- Their most ardent critic, CKNW radio shock jock Bruce Allen, has spent numerous segments railing against the “big ugly cement barriers that turned our streets into eyesores.” And yet, he is a fan of the more understated network of traffic-calmed residential streets that allow cyclists to traverse the city in relative safety and peace. --- “Sixty per cent of the 280 kilometres of Vancouver bike lanes are on side streets and that’s good,” he said in an early 2016 editorial. “And some of those side streets also have traffic calmers or speed bumps to slow down vehicular traffic.”

- Urban-planning and transportation experts have long feted Vancouver’s extensive system of bike-friendly side streets as a cheap and uncontroversial way for bike-resistant North American cities to create the infrastructure that gets people out of their cars and onto two wheels. “It’s very simple,” says Gordon Price, a six-term former city councillor and former director of Simon Fraser University’s City Program. “All you have to do is put in traffic signals where these side streets cross another arterial.” Mr. Price says Vancouver’s place at the forefront of North American cycling infrastructure stems from activists in the early 1970s successfully stopping a freeway from carving through its downtown core.

- After that, he says, Vancouver’s politicians declared that the car would not be the dominant mode of transportation, which paved the way for the city’s first dedicated bike lanes to be created in the early 1990s, with little backlash. These lanes – which force cars to obey lower speed limits in order to give cyclists preferential treatment on an open residential street – soon began to reshape the “mental map” residents use for getting around the city, he said.

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  #1279  
Old Posted Jan 19, 2017, 4:46 PM
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Cyclists are making congestion and pollution in UK cities worse, claims Labour MP

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...-a7532141.html

Quote:
.....

- Rob Flello, who describes himself as a “cycle lane-sceptic”, said “the transfer to two wheels clearly hasn’t solved many problems” and claimed bike lanes led to increased congestion and pollution. He suggested “tarmac formerly used by vehicles” was being “underused by bikes”, adding that could “in turn cause greater congestion and pollution”.

- The Stoke-On-Trent South MP, who sits on the Transport Select Committee, continued: “Make no mistake, congestion is incredibly closely related to pollution. Idling vehicles, stuck in traffic produce far more noxious outpourings than free-flowing ones." He went on to argue that he was not "against bikes" and said he was "supportive of the idea that using bikes can make a meaningful, albeit probably far from decisive, contribution”.

- But, using the example of Cambridge, where around half of residents cycle at least once a week, he appeared to suggest that high rates of cycling had contributed to making it “one of the most congested places in the country”. He also criticised those who treated drivers as an “evil, diesel fume-belching demonic brotherhood, intent on choking our streets and our children’s lungs”.

- Roger Geffen OBE, policy director at Cycling UK, encouraged Mr Flello to visit cities in Denmark and the Netherlands to see how cycling can cut congestion. Mr Geffen told The Independent: "Cycling is a highly efficient way to use road-space – a typical traffic lane can accommodate 2,000 cars per hour, or 14,000 bicycles.

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  #1280  
Old Posted Jan 19, 2017, 5:25 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M II A II R II K View Post
The ‘Peanutabout’ Concept Could Be a Breakthrough for Diagonal Streets

Read More: http://usa.streetsblog.org/2016/12/0...gonal-streets/
...
When I lived in Cambridge, it was in Inman Square. I like this idea!
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