Cycling beats a path to the future

04/Feb/2010

Comments: 6 readers have left a comment

AM I preaching to the converted or are there some readers left who can’t see the benefits of cycling?

Any parent and every child recognises that cycling is a relaxed and fun form of exercise, of family bonding and of enjoying the outdoors.

The camaraderie among weekend leisure cyclists in Perth is so strong that it feels like a giant family outing.

People who cycle to work have their reasons for choosing that form of transport – health. They do it to save on transport costs, convenience or simply for the enjoyment.

Cyclists improve vehicle traffic. Every cyclist is also a motorist, just a motorist who sometimes refuses to use a car.

One more cyclist on the road is one less car in the freeway traffic.

Unfortunately, some drivers can’t see the symbiosis. They will complain that they – and only they – have the right to safe, individual mobility.

The more the people who think this way, the more drivers there will be.

This in turn will place greater demands on our community to make more room for cars and, like some cities in the US, we will remove parks and walking paths to make more room for more cars.

Most of what destroys the quality of life in modern cities results from trying to make more room for cars.

Demand at Perth train station car parks is so heavy that new car parks are needed. Yet in a recent Public Transport Authority survey, 60 per cent of cars parked in these suburban railway stations had driven less than three kilometres. That’s equivalent to a 10-minute cycle.

Yet cycling can be an obvious choice for thousands of Perth commuters.

The bicycle is no longer a backyard toy.

Perth is at the beginning of the long-standing European trend where the bicycle is an integral – and often priority – form of transport in medium to large density towns and cities. Cities like Perth.

The belief that you need a cup of tea and a lie-down after a three-kilometre cycle is totally wrong, as is the belief that you need a shower and new clothing after a ride (though each case is different).

And cycling doesn’t have to be the sole form of transport.

Most cyclists own cars, pay registration fees and use their cars for longer trips and in circumstances where the car is more convenient.

Local authorities and the State Government are continuously expanding Perth’s bicycle network of shared paths and on-road cycling facilities. It is already one of the best in Australia and one that makes use of the city’s predominantly flat coastal terrain.

And the PTA isn’t giving up on its commitment to people who want to cycle to trains stations either – new convenient, secure, sheltered bicycle parking is continually being rolled out.


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What everyone else is thinking

Colin Christensen

13/02/2010

Cycling as a cummuting option is a missed opportunity for too many people. I rode for more than two decades until somehealth issues cut me down. Fo rthe three or four years after I sorely missed the convenience, early morning alertness and, yes, some smugness I admit.

Why aren't the bulk of my fellow workers taking a smarter option?

(After three or four years without, I did find an alternative - unicycling to work. Problem solvered and felling much better for it.)

hal burdon

05/02/2010

At the age of 86 I am still riding a bike every day of the week ,almost the whole of my life I have been doing a similiar level of activity ,and my doctor will vouch for my level of fitness . I can only feel sorry for those of you who have not realised the advantages of leaving the car in the garage (as I do )and getting out to enjoy using the network of cycle paths around Perth ! .

dougpritch

05/02/2010

Things take time in Perth. We are still getting over the novelty of 4 wheels, and exhaust fumes, and a lot of folk feel its an assett.
When they realise its a liability to run a car they will all jump on bikes.
Has anyone seen the parking space at Cambridge (UK) rail station? The area is considerable, and its ALL bikes. There is a tiny congested strip where cars go for set down, and pick up-but the rest is a sea of bikes.
Some cities in Europe have the same scenario, and for riders its often cold and wet but its part of the culture, and makes a lot of sense.
We will wake up to it one day. Give us time.

adleight

05/02/2010

As an avid weekly cyclist- I cycle in the early mornings for fitness and enjoyment. Anytime after 7 am on the roads here is too hard- you have to do the thinking for EVERYBODY. The cycle system here is wonderful, yet even that is fraught with dangers- pedestrians and naive cyclists that feel entitled to walk in the middle of the lanes, or people walking that feel compelled to let their dog loose on the shared path. I have only lived in Perth for two years (from the US) and I can say that aside form these issues, it only takes a quick look at the cycle proprietor's home garage to see the boom that cycling is enjoying as more people discover the benefits of cycling. Expand the cycle paths, add bike racks to the fronts of buses to encourage alternate multi-modal transportation, do community TV notices/fines for the idiots who feel obliged to yell and honk for no reason, and Perth, you have got a great thing going.

Community Minded

04/02/2010

More needs to be done to meld the cycleways to each other and the roads....an example of this is at the intersection of Alexander Drive and Morley Drive...City of Stirling has made some lovely cycle lanes...unfortunately, once you cross the intersection the cyclepath ABRUPTLY stops!!! What are the cyclist and motorist meant to do there???? What is the point? This is what creates confusion and causes rage.

AIR

04/02/2010

The person who most complained about shortage of CAR PARKING at the rail station arrived too late..

Simple White Painted Shoulder lines on Roads leading too each rail station, would ensure that each early rising - yet half hearted cyclist would realise that they could cycle enjoyably and safely to the railway station.
Until those White Lines get painted, half hearted, cautious, or previously injured cyclists are smart enough to drive.

When there is a Painted White Line, cyclists can focus solely on what is in front of them. They can avert motorist (sometimes not visible) who opens a car door unexpectedly.
When Cyclists are expected to also share the one driving lane, with the full range of W.A. motorists it can be most concerning..

One white painted line separating the two, may seem cheap, but That most valuable white line is often ALL that is needed to encourage, & inspire confidence in the greater number of cautious cyclists - who DRIVE for fear of other motorist

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