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Article: Bicycles' Popularity Grows in Cities

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Old 04-10-11, 04:23 PM
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ablang
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Article: Bicycles' Popularity Grows in Cities

Bicycles' Popularity Grows in Cities
Bicycling has become fashionable. Urban and transportation
policymakers take note.

BY: Alex Marshall | December 2010

Bicycling, the mode of transportation stereotyped by short-pants-
wearing tykes or spandex-clad health nuts, has become fashionable. Not
since the 1880s -- when the first bicycle craze hit the nation and
produced some of its first paved roads -- has this two-wheeled, self-
propelled machine been such a symbol of urbanity and style.

In September, The New York Times ran a cover story in its fashion
section about fashionable women and the bikes they were riding as part
of their stylish ensemble, not apart from it. They could even choose
high-status accessories, such as a $365 leather and canvas bag for
their handlebars.

“These daring young women, in their stylish attire, are turning heads
as they roll by,” wrote Ruth La Ferla, the story’s author. “They are
clad not in spandex but in fluttery skirts, capes and kitten heels.”

I don’t know what a kitten heel is, but it sounds nice.

The retail clothing company Banana Republic has been running full-page
ads in national magazines showing a relaxed young man in a dark gray
suit, red shirt, scarf and tie. And he’s not behind the wheel of an
Italian sports car -- he’s on a bicycle.

As someone who’s been waiting for and urging along such a trend for
about 20 years, I can only say, “Bravo!” I first fell in love with
this type of cycling in Holland, where it’s common to see people in
fine dresses and suits on bikes. It seemed so civilized.

Where I live in New York City, it certainly has become a real trend. I
see fairly frequently now fashionable women on bikes, often with
wicker baskets up front, sometimes wearing high heels and even elegant
hats instead of helmets. Gentlemen riders, wearing pinstriped suits
and carrying leather briefcases are a less frequent sight, but I do
see them.

The Web, as always, amplifies this trend. There are countless blogs --
Urban Velo, Cyclelicious, Velo Chic NYC, Chic Cyclists, *Bikes and The
City -- dedicated to celebrating cycling in towns and cities. One is
appropriately called Riding Pretty, which shows well-dressed women on
bikes, often in heels and dresses, in and around San Francisco. The
site says it is “dedicated to all the girls in the world who want to
ride pretty on a bicycle. Here’s to living a bicycle lifestyle!”

So bicycling is a lifestyle! Who knew?

The significance of this trend goes way beyond fashion. It shows that
bikes are once again becoming a means of transportation, not just for
exercise or sport. And like that other mode of transportation, the
car, bikes are becoming a means of expressing ourselves.

There’s little question that bicycling is coming back, whether as a
pleasure spin, an outing to pick up milk or a practical roll to work.
The venerable League of American Bicyclists, an organization that
dates to the first cycling craze in the 1880s, reports that cycling to
work grew 43 percent from 2000 to 2008. Selected cities have grown
much faster. Portland, Ore., one of the nation’s cycling capitals, has
seen a 238 percent increase in bike commuting.

This trend is happening both because and in spite of public policy. In
New York City, Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan has
practically, in the wink of an eye, created bike lanes all over town
by painting new white lanes on streets. Our mean streets have become
less so. But bicycling, perhaps even more so when clad in a dress or
three-piece suit, requires a degree of bravery and assertiveness. It’s
still rough out there.

For policymakers outside New York, the choice is whether to embrace or
resist this trend. Embracing it would mean more bike lanes and even
more importantly, changing the legal relationship between bicycles and
cars so that a driver is, by default, at fault in any collision. My
research has shown that this more than anything else would make
cycling safer because it would change drivers’ conduct.

Places with an older network of gridded streets will have an easier
time accommodating those fashionable young ladies and men on bikes.
But more suburban cities, with swooping arterials and soaring
freeways, can do what they can. They risk ignoring this trend at their
peril. For cities that aim to be receptive to a creative culture,
accommodating bicycles and fashionable urban riders may be just as
important as having a light rail line or an abundance of coffee shops.

You may use or reference this story with attribution and a link to
https://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=htt...ws-cities.html
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