Lancet Study: We Must Reduce Auto Dependency
Lots of catching up to do after the holiday weekend. Here’s a sampling of what’s been coming in over the network:
Austin on Two Wheels threw a link up on Twitter to a very intriguing article published last week in the influential medical journal The Lancet (registration required). According to the Montréal Gazette, the researchers concluded that infrastructure spending should be diverted from road building to pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure for a variety of public health reasons:
Streets like this one in Dallas’s Oak Cliff neighborhood won’t get us where we need to go. (Photo: Bike Friendly Oak Cliff)The urban transportation study says encouraging more walking and
cycling would have big benefits for both health and the climate. It
compared different transportation scenarios for London and Delhi.
Walking and cycling came out on top even when compared to increased use
of low-emission vehicles that are widely touted as “green” solutions.“Important
health gains and reductions in CO2 emissions can be achieved through
replacement of urban trips in private motor vehicles with active travel
in high-income and middle-income countries,” the researchers conclude.They
suggest policy-makers divert investment away from roads and toward
provision of infrastructure for pedestrians and cyclists. They suggest
motor vehicles be slowed down and more strictly controlled, while
pedestrians and bikers should have direct routes with priority at
intersections, to “increase in the safety, convenience, and comfort of
walking and cycling.”
Elsewhere around the network: Jarrett Walker at Human Transit continues his comprehensive coverage of Bus Rapid Transit around the world. The Chicago Bicycle Advocate has the scoop on a “bicycle simulator” that could be used to help people learn how to ride safely in challenging traffic conditions. And Bike Friendly Oak Cliff talks about the need for a radical new vision of how streets are designed.
The problem is not a lack of bike and ped infrastructure. The problem is that the lobbyists with fat pockets are deciding how our public space is used.
Look at Europe! In Amsterdam you can see garages full of bikes. People prefer riding to driving. They build hundreds of kilometers of bike ways every year.
I absolutely agree with this text. Cycling and walking are much healthier because it makes you feel better. It is good for your heart and stamina. In addition, driving cars cause much smoke that does not good effect on our world.
The people_nation are lazy. They do not stain to make change in !
The next trouble will be the parking of the bicycles!
Nowadays people are very lazy. Everyone associated with car. The car is no longer a luxury but now the bike has been replaced.
Not only lazy people do not like to wait for the bus station lengths.
Very calm street..;)
It
compared different transportation scenarios for London and Delhi.
More green tips…;)