Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

Businesses in Groningen, the Netherlands: More Bike Traffic, Please

What happens when transportation planners try to accommodate cyclist traffic? If you're in Groningen, the Netherlands, where over half of all trips are made by bike, you get complaints from business owners -- who don't want cyclists diverted from their street.

David Hembrow of A View From the Cycle Path says students are flooding the Zonnelaan bike path to Zernike Campus, leading planners to recommend alternate "smart routes," which are separated from autos and have no traffic lights. Some merchants along the Zonnelaan path aren't having it. Hembrow explains the video:

The first person interviewed says that when he started his business 25 years ago research showed that 10000 cyclists per day were using the Zonnelaan route. That's why they located there. The number of cyclists past his door has more than doubled since they started the business. Like other business owners on the route, he's disappointed that the local government is redirecting passing traffic away from his door as this could result in less business. The local government has organised a meeting to try to address these concerns.

In the Netherlands, shopkeepers like cyclists.

A TV news spot where the "man on the street" complains that there aren't enough bikes. Has the world gone topsy-turvy?

Also today: Reflections -- or laments -- on U.S. train station design at The Urbanophile and Second Avenue Sagas. Treehugger wonders how China can make trucks safer for cyclists and pedestrians while Canada and the States can't afford it. BikeWalkLee Blog has an update from Florida, where the Lee County MPO has adopted a street safety plan. And Baltimore Spokes links to a report that says America's standard crosswalk is "essentially not visible" to motorists.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Budget Crunch: Advocates Push Mamdani For Massive Fair Fares Expansion

The expansion would offer free transit on the subway and bus for people making up to 150 percent of the federal poverty level, which is not a lot.

February 5, 2026

AV Snub: School Bus Drivers Close The Doors On Autonomous Vehicles

School bus drivers are joining the chorus of opposition to a possible statewide expansion of Waymo, but it could be too late.

February 5, 2026

Thursday’s Headlines: Menin to the Rescue Edition

Al fresco is back on the menu, Council Speaker Julie Menin said on Wednesday. Plus more news.

February 5, 2026

Commentary: US DOT’s Misguided War on Bikeways

"European genes do not produce some kind of innate affinity for human-powered mobility — [and] people on any continent will use bike infrastructure if it is safe."

February 5, 2026

City Council to Bring Back Year-Round Outdoor Dining After Adams-Era Decimation

New Council Speaker Julie Menin wants to scrap Adams-era rules that shrunk the program to just 400 approved locations from a pandemic era high of 8,000.

February 4, 2026
See all posts