Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
GET UPDATES FROM David Dodge
 

The Most Efficient Transportation On the Planet

Posted: 01/29/2013 8:06 am

As anybody who has seen astronaut Chris Hadfield's incredible images from space can attest, the single most prominent human-made features of cities like Toronto, Windsor or Edmonton are roads. As seen from space the new Anthony Henday ring road forms a dramatic necklace around our home base of Edmonton.

Ever since the 1950s the car has been the accidental architect of our cities. Billions of dollars have been dedicated to roads, overpasses, tunnels and other car infrastructure.

But this single minded dedication to making sure cars got to where they wanted to go as fast as they could has had some pretty serious unintended consequences.

As our country becomes more and more urban it's clear that while our cities will continue to grow in size and population there's only so many roads that lead to the places people want to go. This leads to everyone's favourite way to wile away a few hours a day -- traffic gridlock.

As Andrew Coyne says in Maclean's "Traffic is slowly strangling our cities." Increasing traffic uses more fuel, increases pollution and commute times and Coyne quotes a German study which finds that "being in heavy traffic triples your risk of a heart attack within an hour."

Enter the bicycle. It is the most efficient form of transportation on the planet. You can move five times faster than walking and go three times as far on the same amount of caloric energy. Cars use 50 to 80 times more energy than a bike to travel the same distance and as any public heath expert will tell you North America is suffering from rising obesity rates.

As a popular expression on the Internet goes, your bike runs on fat and saves you money while your car runs on money and makes you fat.

The benefits of the bicycle certainly were not lost on the City of Vancouver when it decided to flip the traditional urban script.

"Cycling is our second highest priority in the transportation system. Since 1997 we established priorities with walking being the highest priority, cycling second, transit third, and the automobile is at the bottom of the list," says Jerry Dobrovolny, the director of transportation with the City of Vancouver.

And unlike cities that dabble in making their cities more bike-friendly, Vancouver has actually dramatically increased the use of bikes and decreased traffic congestion in downtown Vancouver.

Loading Slideshow...
  • Erin O'Melinn at the Bike Doctor

    Erin O'Melinn of HUB, a Vancouver bike advocacy group, at the Bike Doctor, one of many bike shops supported by Vancouver's best-in-Canada cycling infrastructure. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures

  • Erin O'Melinn of HUB passes by one of the many bike counters in Vancouver as the city measures and assesses the success of its new bike infrastructure. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures

  • Councilor Heather Deal

    Councillor Heather Deal says she feared for her political life the day they closed a lane to cars on the Burrard Street Bridge and opened a new separated bike lane. But the move was successful and helped reduce traffic congestion and support cycling. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures

  • Jerry Dobrovolny (left) is the director of transportation for the city of Vancouver. Vancouver has reversed the traditional urban transportation development script prioritizing walking as the highest priority, cycling in second place, then transit and finally the automobile as the lowest priority. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures

  • Bike wheels

    Bikes are close to 99 per cent efficient at transferring energy into motion. You can go five times faster and three times the distance over walking on the same caloric energy input. Photo David Dodge, Green Energy Futures

Vancouver's design success

Jerry Dobrovolny is a six-foot-six former pro football player who has presided over the startling growth in cycling in Vancouver. According to Dobrovolny trips have gone up by 180 per cent over the past 15 years and the amount of people cycling to work has grown from 3.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent.

In fact, 12 out of every 100 trips in Vancouver are done via bicycle today.

And they did it not by focusing on the middle-aged-man-in-lycra, or MAMIL for short, but by building bike infrastructure that kids and grandmas and people that aren't super proficient bike riders would feel comfortable using.

"We know that there's many people that are interested in cycling, but they're not comfortable riding next to cars," says Dobrovolny.

"We feel that we can get the 60 per cent that we know from studies that are interested in trying to cycle... we feel confident that we can get them out on their bikes."

Nearly all cities have bike lanes, but paint on the road just isn't safe enough for kids, seniors and non-MAMILs. Instead Vancouver is using separated bike lanes and bike boulevards.

Separated bike lanes are dedicated lanes built only for cyclists that are physically separated from cars. Bike boulevards are re-purposed residential streets that have been made bike friendly. "It's a regular street, but it's been designed so that bikes generally have the right of way," says Erin O'Melinn, the executive director of Hub, Vancouver's largest cycling advocacy organization.

I went for a tour of around parts of downtown Vancovuer with O'Melinn and it was remarkably easy to get around on a bike.

There is green paint and stencils on the road helping carve space for cyclists, there is clear signage and on the bike boulevards there are single-lane roundabouts to slow down cars and barriers that stop cars but let bikes through.

This calms traffic on the street and encourages people to bike, because they don't have to interact with as many vehicles, says O'Melinn.

These bike boulevards are great for residential areas and there is quite an extensive network of them in Vancouver but it's the separated bike lanes that are the real game changer.

Separated bike lanes on the Dunsmuir Viaduct saw four times more cyclists using the road. Safety has improved as well.

"Since the separated lanes have gone in downtown we've seen a big reduction in the number of collisions of all types, including the number of people riding on sidewalks, so pedestrians feel much more comfortable," says O'Melinn.

Financial sense

Reducing pollution and improving health are great reasons to invest in cycling, but another reason is that it's cheap like borscht.

"Whereas heavy trucks and buses and automobiles break down the road infrastructure and result in a lot of added costs in terms of maintenance. When we build a pedestrian or bike facility they last for 100 years," says Dobrovolny.

In 2010 Vancouver's city council approved a $25 million 10-year bike plan. For comparison the Canada Line, the new rapid transit line from Vancouver to Richmond that was built in time for the Olympics cost $2 billion. Estimates for the planned North Fraser Perimeter Road are in the order of $3 billion.

When it comes to the household budget bikes fare quite well. Forget the sticker price of your car, the Automobile Association of America estimates the average cost of operating a car at around $9,000 a year. The estimated operating cost of a bike? Around $400. That leaves plenty of cash for cabs, car rentals or bus fare when the bike isn't the best choice.

With transportation at roughly 10 to 15 per cent of an average household's budget it's worth finding fat to trim.

The tipping point for Vancouver

Heather Deal is Vancouver city councillor who was involved when the city decided to convert a whole lane of traffic on the Burrard Bridge into a bike lane.

"That was the first time we took space away from cars. I was assigned the media, I thought this is the last time I'll ever get elected because I'm going down over one kilometre of one lane for traffic," says Deal.

"That day came and we had hundreds of cyclists at the edge of the bridge waiting to cross when we cut that ribbon at 7 a.m. There were news helicopters circling overhead. There was a radio station that had put up a booth to interview cars while they were caught in the inevitable traffic jam that was going to happen."

"We cut that ribbon and we cycled across that closed lane and nothing happened. There was no traffic backup. There was no armageddon. Chaos did not ensue. The city survived and so did we. We went on to get re-elected and build more bike lanes after the next election."

While Vancouver certainly has some climatic advantages that other cities don't that hasn't stopped winter cities like Minneapolis and Montreal from investing in cycling infrastructure.

In fact, cold and frigid Minneapolis was just recently named the best bike city in the U.S.

And in Vancouver what looked like a confrontational move to take space away from cars actually wound up creating more space for cars and a new, safer space for bikes, a pleasant surprise for Heather Deal and her colleagues on council.

 

Follow David Dodge on Twitter: www.twitter.com/greenergy_dave

FOLLOW CANADA ALBERTA
 
 
  • Comments
  • 15
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
04:18 PM on 01/29/2013
And the debate continues! Yes, some cyclists suck and so do some car drivers. Some cyclists are excellent and some car driver are excellent. Many of both do not know how to intereact with each other or use cycling infrastructure like "bike boxes". I cycle 5,000 km per year in Toronto and yes, I, like other cyclists, pay my way - just because we ride a bike does not mean we don't pay our share of taxes! BTW, I am helping the gridlock situation on Toronto by NOT driving my car to work. Your welcome.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:00 PM on 01/29/2013
Another way of ridding ourselves of this gridlock is to force people & business to locate together in closer proximity to one another. Build homes next to the business which employees of the business must live in.

Pretty simple solution & no need to duplicate infrastructure to accommodate bicycles.
photo
AcunningDisguise
magnus gigas caput
08:33 PM on 01/29/2013
City planning? What an outrageous and radical solution!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:37 AM on 01/30/2013
I hear tell they do something like that (city planning) in those European Nordic countries, Norway, Sweden & Finland.

Maybe someday it will catch on elsewhere.
12:18 PM on 01/29/2013
Wow - you say 12 out of every 100 trips in Vancouver are done via bicycle today. Where are you getting your facts – Gregor Robertson? Bikes are most definitely not “the most efficient transportation on the planet” when it comes to moving masses of people. If it were the most efficient then maybe they should have built bike lanes instead of Sky-Train and Canada Line – we could have been up to 90 out of every 100 trips in Vancouver done via bicycle then, right? Vancouver owes its growth and prosperity to Sky-Train and Canada Line; in fact, one could argue that the efficiency and success of these modes of mass transit has made it possible for bike lanes to even exist. And the City has invested how many millions in the past 15 years and the amount of bikers have grown from 3.5 to 4.5%? Frankly, that’s pathetic and really proves there is very little interest for people to move to this form of transportation. How many people have shifted to transit in that time? As for cost, of course it’s cheaper to bike: bikers do not pay their fair share of costs. Transit should always be first priority because it affects more people and it truly is the most efficient method to move the masses required for a prosperous city; bike lanes should be last on any priority list.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:59 AM on 01/29/2013
In winter one can use studded tires. A Norwegian brother in law did it through university.

Properly equipped, I'm thinking that riding in the snow may be more pleasant than riding in the rain.

That said, I walk almost everywhere. Work is 10 minutes a day. If one considers the cost of running a car, even taking a less paid job so one could take alternative means of transportation should be part of the decision making process.
photo
AcunningDisguise
magnus gigas caput
08:38 PM on 01/29/2013
Studs are wonderful head protectors but buy the expensive ones the cheap ones shed studs..
Mec 4018-655 good for two years.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:34 PM on 01/30/2013
It was -41C with the windchill outside here yesterday. Studded winter tires or not, I am not riding a bicycle out in that! Even 10-15 minutes out in that kind of windchill can be extremely dangerous and add to that the added wind exposure from riding fast to get to work quickly.....bicycles are fine for some parts of our country but not all of them LOL
11:44 AM on 01/29/2013
Bikes are fine. The riders generally suck. They have no regard for anyone else but themselves. Bikes don't work for the elderly or the handicapped or the young. So there goes a large percent of the population. They don't work for most people, period. So, come up with something that works for the majority of people and not the minority and get off your soapbox. What I am supposed to do? Travel to work by bike in the pouring rain over hills I can't ride. Great idea. and I get to work all hot and sweaty, I really want to sit around in sweat soaked underwear at work all day. Most places of work don't offer showers. Really, what are you thinking? live in the real world.
07:21 PM on 01/29/2013
Whoa there buddy! Praise for cycling does not mean judgement against motor vehicles. For some people who live in the real world, bicycling is a valid mode of transportation. And, believe it or not, there's a segment of the population who might benefit from rethinking their normal mode of transportation.

I am always amazed at the hate shown in these forums whenever cycling is mentioned. Can you not see that having less cars on the road benefits your own situation?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlwaysCanadian
Lifelong Pacifist
08:58 AM on 01/29/2013
Biking is great, but the Canadian weather is a great bottleneck. People would find it hard to bike in the rain or snow.
11:36 AM on 01/29/2013
I bike 30 km per day all year in Toronto. Rain is not an issue with the right clothes. Heavy snows do shut me down but only on a temporary basis. A major bike path I use is cleared and salted so that certainly helps.
photo
AcunningDisguise
magnus gigas caput
08:40 PM on 01/29/2013
The right gear is key! Sally Ann is your friend!
photo
AcunningDisguise
magnus gigas caput
08:39 PM on 01/29/2013
Riding in the snow rocks! Then again I'm powered.