Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Advocacy & Safety
Reload this Page >

Paint bike lanes, or pave them?

Notices
Advocacy & Safety Cyclists should expect and demand safe accommodation on every public road, just as do all other users. Discuss your bicycle advocacy and safety concerns here.

Paint bike lanes, or pave them?

Old 03-10-21, 01:39 PM
  #1  
Korina
Happy banana slug
Thread Starter
 
Korina's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: Arcata, California, U.S., North America, Earth, Saggitarius Arm, Milky Way
Posts: 3,693

Bikes: 1984 Araya MB 261, 1992 Specialized Rockhopper Sport, 1993 Hard Rock Ultra, 1994 Trek Multitrack 750, 1995 Trek Singletrack 930

Mentioned: 31 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1531 Post(s)
Liked 1,527 Times in 915 Posts
Paint bike lanes, or pave them?

Interesting article. The comments are also interesting.

https://sf.streetsblog.org/2021/03/0...#disqus_thread
Korina is offline  
Old 03-10-21, 02:23 PM
  #2  
Notso_fastLane
Senior Member
 
Notso_fastLane's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Layton, UT
Posts: 1,606

Bikes: 2011 Bent TW Elegance 2014 Carbon Strada Velomobile

Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 626 Post(s)
Liked 701 Times in 418 Posts
When I lived in Germany, all of the bike lanes there (city of Hamburg) were different color pavement, some were actual brick. They had very good infrastructure for biking, which combined with the widespread public transportation, made it so I never even rented a car (I lived there for 16 months).

I would love to see that kind of infrastructure here.
Notso_fastLane is offline  
Likes For Notso_fastLane:
Old 05-02-21, 02:55 PM
  #3  
epnnf
Full Member
 
epnnf's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: SW Ohio
Posts: 401

Bikes: 2016 Masi strada vita due, 2019 Kona Dew Plus

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 268 Post(s)
Liked 80 Times in 55 Posts
No bike lanes! Vehicular Cycling.
epnnf is offline  
Old 05-02-21, 03:54 PM
  #4  
Rick
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,415
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 612 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 387 Times in 270 Posts
No bike lanes! Vehicular Cycling.
This is correct. Many who are interested in bike lanes, rave about the bike lanes in Europe and blindly accepts the poorly designed bike lanes in the US. Bike infrastructure in Europe is designed so people can efficiently get were they are going in safety. Bike lanes in the US are designed to keep bicyclists from slowing down the motorists at all costs.
Rick is offline  
Likes For Rick:
Old 05-02-21, 05:10 PM
  #5  
Daniel4
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Toronto
Posts: 3,501

Bikes: Sekine 1979 ten speed racer

Mentioned: 15 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1480 Post(s)
Liked 639 Times in 437 Posts
Originally Posted by Rick
... Bike lanes in the US are designed to keep bicyclists from slowing down the motorists at all costs.
Not necessarily. My comfortable ride is 15 km/hr. I can go faster of I'm in front of a car but no way would I be able to reach 50 km/hr or faster unless I'm rolling down a hill. So if I'm not in a bike lane, I will be slowing down traffic - unless there are no cars.

Protected bike lines provide an incentive for more people to get out of their cars and ride. Those are the people who just can't ride in traffic with cars and trucks there. So regardless of what you think of them, I would welcome them into the bike lane, on their bikes.
Daniel4 is offline  
Old 05-02-21, 07:03 PM
  #6  
Rick
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,415
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 612 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 387 Times in 270 Posts
Not necessarily. My comfortable ride is 15 km/hr. I can go faster of I'm in front of a car but no way would I be able to reach 50 km/hr or faster unless I'm rolling down a hill. So if I'm not in a bike lane, I will be slowing down traffic - unless there are no cars.
When I talk about poorly designed bike lanes in the US. I am talking about that painted lane garbage and some of the protected lanes that dump riders into the intersection with no consideration of lane position. I commonly ride down a 65mph highway and am not slowing down traffic. It is called lane sharing and surprisingly cars do have steering wheels.

Protected bike lines provide an incentive for more people to get out of their cars and ride. Those are the people who just can't ride in traffic with cars and trucks there. So regardless of what you think of them, I would welcome them into the bike lane, on their bikes.
Protected bike lanes with there uncontrolled intersections funnel you into a false sense of security. What happens when you and these people you welcomed into these bike lanes come to the end of it. A bike path or public path that has properly controlled intersections is welcome. US bike lanes are a far cry from being safe. I am a responsible person and avoid bike lanes even more than I do covid. I don't like safe spaces because they are not safe.
Rick is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 05:23 AM
  #7  
livedarklions
Tragically Ignorant
 
livedarklions's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: New England
Posts: 15,613

Bikes: Serotta Atlanta; 1994 Specialized Allez Pro; Giant OCR A1; SOMA Double Cross Disc; 2022 Allez Elite mit der SRAM

Mentioned: 62 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 8186 Post(s)
Liked 9,095 Times in 5,053 Posts
Originally Posted by epnnf
No bike lanes! Vehicular Cycling.

There's a subforum for that debate. It does not belong here by rule.

This thread is not about whether or not there should be bike lanes, it's about how they should be marked. Don't hijack it into the vc subforum.
​​​​

Last edited by livedarklions; 05-03-21 at 05:28 AM.
livedarklions is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 06:58 AM
  #8  
unterhausen
Randomhead
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
Posts: 24,385
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4 Post(s)
Liked 3,686 Times in 2,509 Posts
I think the color is less important than segregation. Color the asphalt or paint it, there is no effect if people can easily drive their vehicles on the bike lane.

It's good to see VC is still alive in the hearts of a vanishingly small population of cyclists. But it does seem like trolling in this thread.
unterhausen is offline  
Likes For unterhausen:
Old 05-03-21, 09:43 AM
  #9  
Rick
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,415
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 612 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 387 Times in 270 Posts
There's a subforum for that debate. It does not belong here by rule.
I believe in responsibility not convoluted safe spaces.
Rick is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 10:17 AM
  #10  
Gresp15C
Senior Member
 
Gresp15C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 3,893
Mentioned: 20 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1062 Post(s)
Liked 665 Times in 421 Posts
My view is that we're a long way off from when the color of bike lanes will matter. We're still just figuring out how to design our cities to make driving a car safer, much less riding a bike. Even in places with bike lanes, we still have to adapt to our surroundings. No cyclist who has survived for more than five minutes is likely to be confused when a bike lane ends or merges into traffic at intersections. Perhaps in places where dangerous intersections are the exception rather than the rule, some additional markings would be beneficial.

A good use for the colored paths is to warn pedestrians that they're about to walk across a bike thoroughfare.

As a practical aside, I suspect that the layer of colored asphalt is likely to spall off in regions with a hard winter. It might not be any more durable than paint.
Gresp15C is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 10:34 AM
  #11  
livedarklions
Tragically Ignorant
 
livedarklions's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: New England
Posts: 15,613

Bikes: Serotta Atlanta; 1994 Specialized Allez Pro; Giant OCR A1; SOMA Double Cross Disc; 2022 Allez Elite mit der SRAM

Mentioned: 62 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 8186 Post(s)
Liked 9,095 Times in 5,053 Posts
Originally Posted by Rick
I believe in responsibility not convoluted safe spaces.
Good for you, quit trolling.
livedarklions is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 10:51 AM
  #12  
unterhausen
Randomhead
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
Posts: 24,385
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4 Post(s)
Liked 3,686 Times in 2,509 Posts
Originally Posted by Gresp15C
My view is that we're a long way off from when the color of bike lanes will matter. We're still just figuring out how to design our cities to make driving a car safer, much less riding a bike.
Cities have been designed around parking and car traffic throughput for a very long time. It's not working. The huge streets needed for car traffic at rush hour encourage speeding and reckless driving, and the results speak for themselves. In a lot of cities, the majority of people that live there don't have a car, and those that do leave them parked most of the time. That's the advantage of a city. And so for some reason, the transportation is mostly designed for people that don't live there. It's upside-down way of doing things, and it's slowly changing. Or in the case of Paris, it's rapidly changing.
unterhausen is offline  
Likes For unterhausen:
Old 05-03-21, 11:10 AM
  #13  
Rick
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,415
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 612 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 387 Times in 270 Posts
Cities have been designed around parking and car traffic throughput for a very long time. It's not working. The huge streets needed for car traffic at rush hour encourage speeding and reckless driving, and the results speak for themselves. In a lot of cities, the majority of people that live there don't have a car, and those that do leave them parked most of the time. That's the advantage of a city. And so for some reason, the transportation is mostly designed for people that don't live there. It's upside-down way of doing things, and it's slowly changing. Or in the case of Paris, it's rapidly changing.
Many other countries designed their cities around the people living in that location. We didn't, France and others are people centric. The US is car centric. Will the colored patches in the road do anything to change this?
Rick is offline  
Likes For Rick:
Old 05-03-21, 12:57 PM
  #14  
Gresp15C
Senior Member
 
Gresp15C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 3,893
Mentioned: 20 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1062 Post(s)
Liked 665 Times in 421 Posts
Originally Posted by unterhausen
Cities have been designed around parking and car traffic throughput for a very long time. It's not working. The huge streets needed for car traffic at rush hour encourage speeding and reckless driving, and the results speak for themselves. In a lot of cities, the majority of people that live there don't have a car, and those that do leave them parked most of the time. That's the advantage of a city. And so for some reason, the transportation is mostly designed for people that don't live there. It's upside-down way of doing things, and it's slowly changing. Or in the case of Paris, it's rapidly changing.
I live in Madison WI, which is about 250k people if you count the suburbs. So we're not quite up to the level where there is a significant car-free or car-light population, like there is in NYC. Still, there is a lot of centralized employment -- the state government, typical supporting industries like insurance companies, the universities, hospitals, etc. There is a bus system, but not a massive one. There are a couple of big trunk roads that get quite heavy traffic during commuter times. Nobody in their right mind rides on those streets. I have a general rule of thumb that I don't ride on multi-lane roads.

However, because there are still residential neighborhoods extending almost all the way into the downtown area, a major portion of our "bike infrastructure" is simply the residential streets, which have barely any traffic. The need for bike paths and lanes is simply to deal with the areas where there are no such streets, including some traffic bottlenecks due to the number of lakes that the city is built around.

There is a parking shortage downtown, which encourages people to take the bus. But it's not enough. A lot of employers subsidize the parking. Interestingly, the university does not, and so most of the uni employees have found alternative ways to commute.

It seems that the city is being pretty smart about adding bike lanes. They wait until a street or intersection has to be rebuilt anyway. A lot of rebuilding is going on because the underground infrastructure is reaching end of life. For instance my street needed new sewer and gas lines, but when they rebuilt it, they turned it into a marked bike boulevard. We don't follow the apparently widespread practice of painting a stripe in some arbitrary location and declaring it to be a bike lane.
Gresp15C is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 01:04 PM
  #15  
tyrion
Senior Member
 
tyrion's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: San Diego, California
Posts: 4,077

Bikes: Velo Orange Piolet

Mentioned: 28 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2228 Post(s)
Liked 2,011 Times in 972 Posts
They should make all asphalt green, but paint the car paths black.
tyrion is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 07:38 PM
  #16  
jack pot 
Fxxxxr
 
jack pot's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2017
Location: falfurrias texas
Posts: 1,000

Bikes: wabi classic (stolen & recovered)

Mentioned: 4 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2670 Post(s)
Liked 1,149 Times in 871 Posts
Bike Lanes should be demarcated by signs and paint > bicyclists get injured in bike lanes because motorists routinely use bike lanes as a drivable shoulder ............... there should be a moving violation offense for vehicles crossing into a bike lane
__________________
Nothing is true---everything is permitted
jack pot is offline  
Old 05-03-21, 08:39 PM
  #17  
livedarklions
Tragically Ignorant
 
livedarklions's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: New England
Posts: 15,613

Bikes: Serotta Atlanta; 1994 Specialized Allez Pro; Giant OCR A1; SOMA Double Cross Disc; 2022 Allez Elite mit der SRAM

Mentioned: 62 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 8186 Post(s)
Liked 9,095 Times in 5,053 Posts
Originally Posted by Gresp15C
I live in Madison WI, which is about 250k people if you count the suburbs. So we're not quite up to the level where there is a significant car-free or car-light population, like there is in NYC. Still, there is a lot of centralized employment -- the state government, typical supporting industries like insurance companies, the universities, hospitals, etc. There is a bus system, but not a massive one. There are a couple of big trunk roads that get quite heavy traffic during commuter times. Nobody in their right mind rides on those streets. I have a general rule of thumb that I don't ride on multi-lane roads.

However, because there are still residential neighborhoods extending almost all the way into the downtown area, a major portion of our "bike infrastructure" is simply the residential streets, which have barely any traffic. The need for bike paths and lanes is simply to deal with the areas where there are no such streets, including some traffic bottlenecks due to the number of lakes that the city is built around.

There is a parking shortage downtown, which encourages people to take the bus. But it's not enough. A lot of employers subsidize the parking. Interestingly, the university does not, and so most of the uni employees have found alternative ways to commute.

It seems that the city is being pretty smart about adding bike lanes. They wait until a street or intersection has to be rebuilt anyway. A lot of rebuilding is going on because the underground infrastructure is reaching end of life. For instance my street needed new sewer and gas lines, but when they rebuilt it, they turned it into a marked bike boulevard. We don't follow the apparently widespread practice of painting a stripe in some arbitrary location and declaring it to be a bike lane.

I was driving around in Madison in January 2020, and it was a bit icy. Even so, my impression was that there was a much larger proportion of the population bike commuting that time of year than I see in the summer in NH.
livedarklions is offline  
Old 05-04-21, 08:00 AM
  #18  
Gresp15C
Senior Member
 
Gresp15C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 3,893
Mentioned: 20 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1062 Post(s)
Liked 665 Times in 421 Posts
Originally Posted by livedarklions
I was driving around in Madison in January 2020, and it was a bit icy. Even so, my impression was that there was a much larger proportion of the population bike commuting that time of year than I see in the summer in NH.
The city has done a good job of maintaining cycling conditions even during the winter. There are some paved rail-trails that are useful for getting from A to B, one of which I use for my commute. When there's a snowfall, those trails are often cleared before the roads. Conditions are good enough that studded tires on a "regular" bike is pretty much the only gear accommodation needed, and some cyclists get by without studs by just being extra careful and walking their bikes across larger patches of ice. Ridership certainly goes down, a lot, but the "regulars" are out there year-round. Usually the worse the weather, the bigger the smile on their faces.

Something that often gets overlooked, is the amount of time it takes to develop a cycling culture. None of this happened overnight. Even in my time in Madison, the behavior of drivers and cyclists towards one another has improved, but that takes years. Also, finding the preferred routes that are convenient and avoid traffic is a gradually evolving process. Madison started out with a couple of assets. First, it's a college town, and making a large university car-friendly is simply insurmountable. The college and some other central employers have made it desirable to live in the middle of town. The people here have always been outdoorsy -- heck, we have ice fishing. And there's always been a moderate "hipster" movement that looks with envy at some of the more livable cities in the country and the world.
Gresp15C is offline  
Likes For Gresp15C:
Old 05-05-21, 05:27 PM
  #19  
drlogik 
Senior Member
 
drlogik's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 1,767

Bikes: '87-ish Pinarello Montello; '89 Nishiki Ariel; '85 Raleigh Wyoming, '16 Wabi Special, '16 Wabi Classic, '14 Kona Cinder Cone

Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 699 Post(s)
Liked 405 Times in 251 Posts
A painted surface is generally a dangerous and slippery surface. Paved and lined is better, paved with colored tarmac is even better.
drlogik is online now  
Old 05-06-21, 02:43 PM
  #20  
livedarklions
Tragically Ignorant
 
livedarklions's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: New England
Posts: 15,613

Bikes: Serotta Atlanta; 1994 Specialized Allez Pro; Giant OCR A1; SOMA Double Cross Disc; 2022 Allez Elite mit der SRAM

Mentioned: 62 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 8186 Post(s)
Liked 9,095 Times in 5,053 Posts
Originally Posted by tyrion
They should make all asphalt green, but paint the car paths black.

I see a bike path and I want to paint it black.
livedarklions is offline  
Likes For livedarklions:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.