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City Cycling

ArbitoThe Times this week published an extraordinary leading article. Extraordinary not because it says things that most of our readers will find self evident. It is extraordinary because such common sense would have never graced the pages of the Times just a few years ago. It is extraordinary because it has generated hardly any reaction. It is really the beginning of a Velorution.

Image of an artwork by Arbito

Here is the leader in full [my emphasis]:

Pedal Power
Road proceeds should be invested in repopularising the bicycle

In all the sound and fury about roads in the past few weeks, there can be few groups left that have not had their say, though the arguments of cyclists have quietly glided by. When London’s transport supremos launched the extended congestion charge zone this week, they noted in passing the dramatic increase in cyclists that the capital has seen. In the past five years, the number of people cycling in London has risen by almost 50 per cent. These people are not the mad, bearded loons of popular myth, their coat-tails flapping crazily as they pedal round the Elephant and Castle. The modern cyclist is making an elegant and intelligent response to pollution and traffic congestion.

More than half of all car journeys in London cover distances of less than two miles. The car is a creature comfort, but the experience of a short drive in Central London is not necessarily a comfortable one. Many drivers endure grinding stop-and-start, culminating in fury at not being able to find a parking space. They are short of time. Yet many of those who are unemcumbered by children or shopping would save time — and money — by cycling.

On an average journey of four miles in Central London, cycling is the fastest mode of transport. And, fumes and accidents apart, it is much healthier. Regular cycling is said to halve the chances of suffering from heart disease. Campaigners argue that regular cyclists can achieve levels of fitness comparable to those of noncyclists ten years younger. It is a way to reduce stress and demonstrate an environmental conscience at the same time. How modern.

Some pedestrians will dismiss this two-wheeled idealism. They experience cyclists as a menace. Those who ride on pavements, who head in the wrong direction down one-way streets, and who smugly jump traffic lights with no care for others, are certainly stoking contempt for this bespoke form of transport. But the majority should not be tarred with that brush. British cyclists are to be admired for their courage, if not always for their manners.

The risks are daunting. They include aggressive drivers, terrifying junctions, and cycle lanes that stop abruptly with no apology except the word “Ends”. Cyclist fatalities across the UK rose to three a week last year — the only form of transport to show an increase. Cycle lanes need to be better protected from motorists. There would also be safety in numbers. At 2 per cent ridership, London lags far behind cities such as Berlin (10 per cent), Copenhagen (20 per cent) and Amsterdam (28 per cent), where the cyclist numbers influence driver behaviour.

Many British cities suffer particularly badly from 1960s road layouts. But some of those are being reversed. The flow of a gyratory system has been successfully altered in Shoreditch, one notorious London blackspot. Traffic lights and crossings have improved matters at Blackfriars Bridge, the scene of a cyclist death in 2004. But this is not enough. London has a unified transport authority. It must join up the dots. It is unacceptable for the world’s foremost capital city to have a patchwork of cycle routes which peter out timidly on the road to nowhere.

It may seem paradoxical that an intermediate technology is now the future. But it would be churlish not to encourage cycling as the cheap, green answer to so many contemporary troubles. May those who cycle be blessed with clean consciences, stronger arteries and safer journeys.

Article posted Friday, February 23rd, 2007
Comments (11)
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11 Responses to Times are changing

    I am at a loss for words. What a wonderful article. Those are similar to the points I try to make on my humble blog from time to time, here in Japan.

    Fossil fuels depletion (the UK for example is now a net energy importer again since North Sea fields production has peaked) and the dual problem of climate change, have made secure the future of the bicycle as the most efficient means of transportation. Nice to see people waking up to smell the coffee (or earl grey or ocha) and embracing the “verolution”.

  1. Combine this with the double page spread this week in the Evening Standard and it seems as if the revolution may be here – that or the LCC are spending some big money with a PR outfit. I don’t really mind either way as long as it gets more people onto bikes. Ride on.

  2. great, wish we had similar things going on in zurich! suppose it needs to get worse until it gets better. thanks for providing the article, very interesting read. inspiring!

  3. I’m still waiting to wake up! I’m sure I’m still tucked up in bed…It was a nice dream…

  4. It is a great article. TFL and the mayor should be applauded for doing great things for cyclists in London. The introduction of bus lanes and the congestion charge have done more to help cyclists than any number of cycle lanes. As people become increasingly green in their thinking cycling will be seen as more of an option by more people.

    Look out for the 92 page cycling supplement in this Saturday’s Guardian.

  5. This is the same newspaper who’s front page headline on Feb 20th was “Man held over letter bombings is a cyclist”.

  6. Don’t worry, It’s a temporary blip; the journalist that wrote this was shot a dawn…

  7. Fantastic article – and The Guardian are publishing a 96 page guide to cycling in their paper tomorrow (Saturday March 3rd), so it really does look like people are coming around to the ‘idea’ of cycling around London. Now we just need people to join us!

  8. > “Yet many of those who are unemcumbered by children”

    I saw my first ‘tandem plus’ the other day. A lady taking her 2 kids to school. Basically a tandem with one of the one wheeler things for kids that attach to the seatpost. What a cool idea. Was like watching some ducks cross the road :)

  9. I am part of a group that encourages people to cycle. hence asside from the encouraging successes we have, I come across all the many comments for those who don’t. the main one being how unsafe the roads are in London. So if people want to encourage more cycling that realy has to be addressed. I don’t mean squashed up cycle lanes either. Priority and cycle roads not lanes.

  10. [...] here in London and I can’t say that I’ve ever darkened their doorway, but they hit the nail on the head [...]

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