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Bicycling

What’s the Best Way to Make Biking Mainstream in a Car-Centric City?

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Researchers forecast that a combination of protected bike lanes on arterial streets and "self-explaining" traffic calming on residential streets (the orange line) could vault bike mode share in Auckland from 2 percent to 35 percent -- far more than the city's current bike plan (the red line).
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How can you turn a car-dependent city into a place where most people feel safe cycling for transportation?

Researchers in Auckland, New Zealand, created a predictive model to assess how different policies affect cycling rates over several years. In a paper published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives [PDF], they concluded that a combination of protected bike lanes on all wide arterial roads plus traffic calming measures on neighborhood side streets would have a far greater impact on bike mode share than Auckland's current bike plan.

Only 19 percent of Auckland residents say they currently consider cycling to be "always or mostly safe." The city's bike commute mode share stands at 2 percent. While the region has set out to achieve a 35 percent combined biking and walking mode share by 2040 (the walk commute rate is currently 5.5 percent), its actual policies are not that ambitious. The Auckland bike plan calls mainly for un-protected lanes and off-street paths.

Using prior studies, travel surveys, interviews, and historical data, the researchers created a model designed to factor in the complex interactions between bicycling rates and traffic speeds, motor vehicle volumes, street design, the number of cyclists on the road, the number of actual injuries, and subjective perceptions of safety.

Then they plugged four different policy scenarios into their model: the current Auckland bike plan; redesigning residential streets for slow speeds; adding protected bike lanes on all arterial streets; and combining residential traffic calming with bike lanes on arterials. Only the combination scenario had the power to achieve Auckland's bicycling goals, according to the model.

While there is some uncertainty inherent in a model like this, the researchers found that "realistic changes to policy assumptions did not change the shape of outcome behaviors over time."

Researchers also analyzed how growth in cycling can improve public health, decrease air pollution-related mortality, reduce cycling-related injuries, and decrease greenhouse gas emissions, among other outcomes. They found that the combination approach of protected bike lanes and neighborhood traffic calming would also be the most cost effective, with benefits that outstrip the costs by a factor of 24. The biggest benefit, according to the model, would be the lower rate of premature death caused by inactivity.

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