Posts Tagged ‘copenhagen’

Final dispatch from Copenhagen, city of bicycling

Wednesday, June 15th, 2011 by

We’ve all clearly had a good time in Copenhagen. We’ve listened to excellent lecturers from government, industry, academia and the nonprofit sector.  We’ve studied intersections, routes and neighborhoods.  We’ve scrambled around the region in teams on a multimodal scavenger hunt. And we’ve spent time getting to know each other and sharing perspectives over drinks and dinner.

But why did this group of electeds, practitioners, architects and advocates spend a week in Copenhagen with I-Sustain, many through the support of the Scan/Design Foundation?  Wouldn’t it have been cheaper and easier to block off a Friday, order lunch and book a conference room?

Nancy Rottle, a professor at the UW in landscape architecture, kicks off the design charrette

Well, not really. As I’ve described in a previous post, it was essential to immerse ourselves in the actual experience.  That said, this trip is only as useful as what we’ll all do together afterward.

To get us moving in that direction, we dedicated yesterday afternoon to a design charrette.  The basics: we split into three groups of five and took on three separate design tasks specific to the context of Seattle.  One group approached the task of planning and designing a vision for bicycle routes from one neighborhood to another.  The second looked at planning and designing nonmotorized movement and stormwater management inside one neighborhood.  The third group took on one distinct intersection and how to make it work for bikes, pedestrians and stormwater.

After we had some fun, unrestrained visioning, as part of the exercise we all considered necessary policy changes and resource needs to ground us a little in reality.  Oh yeah—this or that costs money.  And oh yeah—this or that would currently be illegal.

Designing better streets for bikes and pedestrians

What came out of it, aside from sheets of very specific hand-drawn overlays, colored maps and a list of policy directions?

I’m sure there are many other lessons that the group came away with, but I learned three main things:

  1. That my colleagues are brilliant and that we’ve needed to have this type of conversation with this particular group for a good while.
  2. That the funding and policy barriers are real—but that the vision is compelling enough for those barriers to be surmountable.
  3. That we’re ready to import a boat-load of new concepts, lessons learned and our collective ideas from the design charrette and innumerable side conversations.

So as I pen this from the Copenhagen airport, I’m sad to call an end to the trip—riding among a sea of people at rush hour, learning from experts in one of the world’s best cities for bicycling, taking in the livable, vibrant urban environment that bicycling has helped to create.  Yet I’m also tremendously excited to return—to build on the charrette and all we’ve learned and get to work re-imagining the Seattle region’s experience.

Taking on tough connections between neighborhoods

Copenhagen to Seattle: Bike infrastructure needed

Monday, June 13th, 2011 by

“If you don’t have the infrastructure, you can’t expect people to cycle.”

So states Niels Jensen with austere authority.  Niels has been a planner with the city of Copenhagen for 30 years; he was kind enough to spend an hour with our study group and kept us on the edge of our seats.

In a place where most people ride a bike to get around, what’s the story behind their infrastructure success?  One thing I’m quick to point out: Copenhagen wasn’t born a bicycle nirvana.  It went through a similar cycle of auto-dominated development “progress” that many cities around the world endured.  But instead of ignoring warning signs that our economies were too dependent on foreign oil and that we were starting down a dangerous path toward losses in livability and sustainability, they responded.  With the bicycle.

Niels, a city planner in Copenhagen, shows the cycletrack plan

From 1960 to 2008, they built out a vast network of bicycle facilities, including some 200 kilometers of additional cycletrack, that serve all types of riders.  This obviously meant investment—and invest they did.  The City of Copenhagen reached an inflection point at this time when they galvanized political will and translated it into an immediate tripling of funding for bicycle infrastructure.  They spent from $10-20 million each year, and have sustained that commitment to the present day.  At about $25 per citizen per year, they have steadily transformed the city into the world-class bicycle city we know today.  And it’s a place where bicycling has helped catalyze incredible developments in livability and community that I briefly described earlier this week.

The great thing is that, even though more people bike to work in Copenhagen than any other mode, they’re not done yet.  In 1997 their first official plan was adopted, calling for cycletracks on all major roads.  Recently, they decided that while 37% of the city—or 155,000 people—ride to work each day, they’re shooting for 50%—roughly 210,000 people each day.  Keep in mind that Copenhagen has about the same population as Seattle, although it’s much less diffuse.

Cycletrack in Copenhagen, rush hour

Yet for a city where one can ride from place to place without ever having to mingle on the streets with cars, it’s a big lift to reach another 55,000 people.  They might get a few thousand with carrots, says Niels (um, not sure what brand of new carrots they’re imagining, since the place is the world’s leading exporter of beta carotene).  They won’t get the rest, however, without a few sticks, he insists.  The sticks he mentions are parking policies and congestion charging.  But without a nod from the Danish government, Copenhagen can’t brandish these sticks.

Interestingly, the Seattle region has quicker and easier access to sticks than Copenhagen.  And the City of Seattle has sustained a yearly $3-4 million commitment to bicycling the last few years.  But the political will for the vision of what is possible and for a tripling of this investment—ironically to levels that are spot on to Copenhagen—is tepid.

We have a perception problem.

At a time when our city departments are needing to make substantial and painful cuts—Seattle’s Department of Transportation has to trim about $8 million (14%) this year alone—investment in bicycling is perceived by many to compete with necessary auto infrastructure.  Our transit agencies are in serious crisis mode, too.  With $157 million less funding each year for the next 4 years, King County metro is considering a 600,000-service hour reduction.  So with more ridership on transit than bikes, bicycling is perceived to be less of a priority.   And forget pedestrian investments—given $1 billion of needed projects, including 952 miles of sidewalks, we’re going to have to stop walking.

That said, we know that we have a solution.  If there’s a time for a simple solution like the bicycle, the time is now.  During an economic crisis, many people lose their jobs, lose their benefits or take pay freezes.  During this particular crisis, we’re seeing another spike in gas prices.  Taken together, owning a car is increasingly expensive, at over $9,000 a year according to the AAA.  Many people are looking for ways to save money and other ways to get around.  And let’s not forget that 37% of people can’t or don’t drive anyway, many of them for financial reasons.  Trade that $9,000 a year of car costs for about $350 a year of bike costs and we have a deal.  Add to that the fact that 71% of Americans want to ride more and we’ve got it, right?

Hold on to your pickled herring.  Taking a cue from my favorite planner in Copenhagen, I say this with austere authority: we’re expecting people to bicycle but we don’t have the infrastructure.

If we’re going to reach 37% of the population (or even 9%)—including many of the 71% who want to ride more, the people who’d ride but they don’t feel safe or the kids who could easily make the one mile trip to school by bike—we need more.  Namely, we need to make a sustained commitment to dream a little bigger, to put down some funding and, in a smart and coordinated way, to not be afraid to use a few sticks to make it happen.

I’d really love to tell my kids some day that we stood on this inflection point in 2011 and didn’t hesitate to transform our cities into great places to live, fit for a Copenhagener like Niels—and, of course, fit for them.

Dispatch from Copenhagen

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011 by

Copenhagen.

What do you think of?

Maybe it’s the 37% of all trips made by bicycle—and 50% by residents.  Or maybe it’s that famous bike counting sign that occasionally reads 36,000 riders, for just one street—and for just one day.  Or it could be the fact that, when asked why they bike, only 1% of Copenhageners reported that it’s for environmental reasons—but 56% say they do it because it’s easy and convenient. Or maybe it has something to do with Copenhagen’s miles and miles of bike-specific infrastructure.

What do I think of? It’s clear that I see stats—but I should say that I saw stats.  Now I see this:

The evening line up

A typical mid-day scene (not even rush hour!)

A family riding home from dinner

Bike parking at a metro station

Just riding

But a few quick photos don’t do justice to how it actually feels to ride with half the city.

It feels close and connected. Brushing arms mid-pedal with someone on their way to work but not being startled. Seeing families, couples and friends with beach towels heading to the coast on a sunny day.

It feels inclusive and multi-generational. The 91-year old father of a new friend out on his bike today, like every day. A pile of kids and their mom passing by on one of hundreds of cargo bikes. A group of young men playfully riding in no particular direction.  A couple in their 60s riding to church.

It feels vibrant and alive. People stopping for lunch and filling the streetscape at outdoor cafes. Kids learning to ride in traffic with parents who don’t look concerned. Tens of thousands of people moving, active, coordinated and pleasant.

It feels like what we want it to feel in Seattle… and in Bellevue, and in Renton, and in Everett, and everywhere. Eight in ten Copenhageners ride here and ride often.  So it’s not a community of bicyclists or car drivers or transit-riders or pedestrians. It’s a community of people—people who happen to bicycle.

Lastly, a quick recap of what my first three days in Copenhagen were like:

Saturday: I land a day early to sleep off the 10-hour flight and to go exploring on my own. I pick up a bike and pedal around town, generally stunned by what I’ve only heard about until now.  I meet up with a few early arrivals from our group of electeds, practitioners, designers and advocates. We share an evening of beers and dinner at a waterside cafe, outdoor festivals and music and strolling through busy but carless streets. Oh yes, and eventually I get a few hours of sleep.

Sunday: Councilmember Sally Bagshaw and I depart for an amazing 6-hour self-guided and mapless tour that brings us from city center to countryside and back. We finally get the hang of how to ride in traffic—bike traffic. I refill water and take off for a 4-hour trip up the coast where I see a castle, reindeer and seaside towns. I’m wearing jeans and riding a 40-pound upright three speed.  Sure, I could live here.

Monday: We begin with a presentation by Andreas Røhl, head of the City’s cycling program.  Then a conversation with the Danish Cycling Federation’s executive director, Jens Rasmussen, and staff. And finally a very comprehensive and guided bicycle infrastructure tour of the city by the folks at Copenhagenize. There’s food and debriefing with our group in there, of course.  And, luckily, we still have the rest of the week. I’m not tiring of this! And that’s a great feeling.

A protest for better bicycling facilities, courtesy of the Danish Cycling Federation

Thanks to I-Sustain for putting on an excellent trip so far and to the Scan | Design Foundation for their generous support in bringing us here.