CopperBrompton
Bicycle: a means of transport between cake-stops
- Location
- London
I'm optimistic. Maybe we should import a few of these. :-)I do hope this idea works for London but I just can't see it happening.![]()

I'm optimistic. Maybe we should import a few of these. :-)I do hope this idea works for London but I just can't see it happening.![]()
Not even the segregation-enthusiastic LCC claim that.People always seem to imagine the Netherlands always had the cycling culture it has today; that's not the case. It was in large part created by the infrastructure:
It's because the Netherlands started from 20% and is a small country. If you think a strip of concrete will increase the number of cyclists on the Embankment (which is already overloaded) you're nuts.The kind of infrastructure planned now will make 10% a year from a pretty small base look like fiddling around the edges.
The Netherlands has a cycling modal share of 30%; the UK 2%. These numbers are not coincidence.
You're ignoring the evidence. Sure, the Netherlands started from a higher base, but everyone is a utility cyclist in the Netherlands. That came about as a result of the infrastructure.If you think a strip of concrete will increase the number of cyclists on the Embankment (which is already overloaded) you're nuts.
Flying carpets?I am more concerned about how the new cyclists will get to the start and from the finish of their route.
No. I've put piece of evidence after piece of evidence in front of you in this thread - all of which demonstrate that the infrastructure is only one small part of what contributed. Go on believing if you like, but at least have the humility to recognise that others who recognise evidence disagree with you.You're ignoring the evidence. Sure, the Netherlands started from a higher base, but everyone is a utility cyclist in the Netherlands. That came about as a result of the infrastructure.
It's hardly a small piece: it's the single most important one by far. You can argue against that all you like, but look at Denmark if you don't like the Netherlands: infrastructure was provided and the cyclists followed.No. I've put piece of evidence after piece of evidence in front of you in this thread - all of which demonstrate that the infrastructure is only one small part of what contributed.
I'm confused now. Were the higher rates of cycling I have witnessed in the likes of Groningen, Copenhagen, Münster and Freiburg achieved thanks to the installation of cyclist-favouring infrastructure, or did the powers-that-be say to themselves "I say chaps, we have a jolly bunch of bicyclists, why don't we give them some roads of their own even though they appear hunky-dory as they are"? Actually I have a theory on which might apply.No. I've put piece of evidence after piece of evidence in front of you in this thread - all of which demonstrate that the infrastructure is only one small part of what contributed. Go on believing if you like, but at least have the humility to recognise that others who recognise evidence disagree with you.
It's just coincidence, apparently.I'm confused now. Were the higher rates of cycling I have witnessed in the likes of Groningen, Copenhagen, Münster and Freiburg achieved thanks to the installation of cyclist-favouring infrastructure
In the same way as they would get to the existing choked up routes/tipper racetracks (depending on prevailing conditions) at present. Or, as I suggested earlier in this thread, we have well signposted quiet backstreet routes (non-circuitous, please - "feeder routes", as it were) linking to segregated rotes along major roads ("arterial routes").I am more concerned about how the new cyclists will get to the start and from the finish of their route.
I know. Your point being?We have those, they are the roads.
So the Netherlands started installing high quality cycling infrastructure from the mid-70s, and has seen a steady recovery in cycling rates, whereas the UK has not, and has seen a steady decline?Segregated cycle lanes came relatively late in the day, after political intervention to slow down traffic and widespread safety measures. THey also came on the back of an already substantial cycling population - at 20% modal share nationwide. I can't find a modal share history, but this graph illustrates the issue nicely:
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I also came across this graph for the irst time, which focuses on central London, and illustrates what TFL has managed by spending almost nothing:
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Sorry, I missed your post last night (the perils of following a thread on a phone)(segregated routes) certainly have their place.
I haven't studied the proposals in detail, but what I have seen is far too much of the compromises that make too many segregated paths unattractive. Bus stop bypasses are just nuts, and the idea that a bike path should switch from one carriageway to another is bizarre.
Is the size of the country relevant? 16 million Dutch vs 65 million in the UK - population density certainly is high, but what about in comparison with just the SE of England? Not so different then. It's not as if anybody is cycling from Maastricht to Alkmaar, or Groningen to Vlissingen, just as nobody cycle commutes from Norwich to Andover or Telford to Watford!It's because the Netherlands started from 20% and is a small country. If you think a strip of concrete will increase the number of cyclists on the Embankment (which is already overloaded) you're nuts.