Posted on Jun 2, 2011 A Spanish city thrives thanks to investments in bicycling and public space Seville, Spain is not in the Netherlands. You won’t see old black & white photographs of grandmothers and grandfathers pushing bicycles past bakeries on charming canal-lined streets. No one you meet shares childhood memories of bicycling to school with friends. There is no deep-rooted habit of reaching for the bicycle for a short trip around town, simply because that’s how everyone gets around. While the Dutch have enjoyed safe, convenient bicycling for so long that it’s now seen as a mainstream, everyday mode of transportation, Seville, Spain’s fourth-largest city, has no such tradition. Seville’s embrace of the bicycle is decidedly 21st century. As recently as 2004, bicycling in this city of 700,000 was seen as a fringe activity for elite athletes and people too poor to own a car. There was no bicycle infrastructure to speak of, and the few Sevillianos who did use bikes for utilitarian purposes (0.2% of all trips in 2000) were practically invisible on the streets and in public life. Cars and trucks dominated the transportation landscape. For the average person to ride a bike to work or school was unimaginable. For people living in most American cities, this story feels awfully familiar. That’s why Seville’s remarkable transformation is drawing excited attention on our side of the Atlantic. In just five years, bicycling has grown from a statistically non-existent mode of transportation to a significant — if not yet ordinary — part of daily life. Seville’s engineers built a network of comfortable separated bikeways connecting the city that now carries 7% of all city traffic. It has implemented a state-of-the-art bike sharing system, offering residents and visitors affordable access to more than 2,000 bicycles stationed throughout the city. And it has redesigned many plazas, squares, and streets to make them more inviting spaces for those traveling on foot and on two wheels. The investments are paying dividends more quickly than anyone figured. Traffic congestion and pollution are declining for the first time in 30 years. Businesses are thriving along bike routes and around the newly improved public spaces that are breathing fresh life into the central city. The number of car trips into the historic city center has plummeted from 25,000 a day to 10,000, freeing valuable space for residents to park and visitors to linger. More than 70,000 bike trips are made every day, up from just 2,500 in 2002. Bicycling has given Sevillianos a healthy, speedy new way to get around. Designing a better city All the bikeways along major roads are physically separated from car and pedestrian traffic as much as possible. City leaders explain that protection from traffic is a key factor in making the system appealing to less experienced riders, particularly children, women, and older people. “Our design target is a 65-year old woman with groceries,” explained Muñoz de la Torre. He reasons that if bicycling is safe for her, it is safe for everyone. The entire 87 miles network cost about $43 million to install between 2007 and 2009 — a bargain when you consider that a single mile of urban freeway in the U.S. easily costs twice as much. With the core bicycling network now in place, Muñoz de la Torre says the city is focused on improving difficult crossings and tight squeezes on the streets, installing more bike parking and launching public education campaigns as the next steps to boost bicycle use. The city expects 15% of all trips in Seville to be made by bike in 2015. Change isn’t easy — but it can happen overnight Initial opposition to removing or relocating car parking was fierce, but business owners came to realize that streets filled with pedestrians and bicyclists create more opportunities for folks to spontaneously stop in a shop or café. Some controversy remains, but polls show both residents and businesses are predominately pleased with the changes. The rise in bicycling is a bright spot in tough economic times, as stores, restaurants and plazas of the central city are usually packed with residents and tourists. If they can do it, why can’t we? Source: peopleforbikes.org |
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