Even the cab waits! But look at their lovely wide bike lanes.
It's definitely a different culture in Copenhagen but one difference I do notice is that there isn't a huge backup of traffic in those right-turning lanes as there would be here in Toronto. Nevertheless, patience is a virtue that very few people seem to have these days.
Noticed too that the bike lanes are sometimes raised, maybe half-way between the roadway and the sidewalk. At the intersections they are ramp down to the roadway.
Forget multiple lanes, IMO the biggest barrier to getting the city bike friendly is the weather, where for at least 4 months of the year only the hardiest cyclists dare venture out. For everyone else, urban cycling is solely a fair to moderate weather activity.I'd love to see multiple bike lanes and a single car lane, instead of multiple car lanes and a single bike lane. Radical thinking is required to get this city bike friendly.
Forget multiple lanes, IMO the biggest barrier to getting the city bike friendly is the weather, where for at least 4 months of the year only the hardiest cyclists dare venture out. For everyone else, urban cycling is solely a fair to moderate weather activity.
The solution isn't wider lanes, but a network of covered lanes, as advocated here http://www.lifeedited.com/bike-lane-in-the-sky/
Seriously, have you ever been to Copenhagen? Somehow the cold weather doesn't seem to be a problem for the Danes...Forget multiple lanes, IMO the biggest barrier to getting the city bike friendly is the weather, where for at least 4 months of the year only the hardiest cyclists dare venture out. For everyone else, urban cycling is solely a fair to moderate weather activity.
Seriously, have you ever been to Copenhagen? Somehow the cold weather doesn't seem to be a problem for the Danes...
If Copenhagen is too European for you, try Minneapolis. If you build the infrastructure, they will come.
Edit: Also, Montreal. Toronto is not a special snowflake. With proper snow clearing, winter cycling is just fine in Toronto, as it is in other cold cities.
When the roads are cleared, I'd say pretty much the same number of cars are on the road, especially during the commute. I agree we should clear the bikes paths and sidewalks, but to suggest that clearing the paths would have an equal affect on bike use is at best inaccurate. As a young adult I cycled in all weathers and simply rode on the curb lane.You could say the same thing about driving. If we didn't clear and salt the roads, most people would not be able to drive to work in the winter.
The solution for cycling is the same - clear and salt the bike lanes. Perhaps provide some more covered bike stations for lockup.