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Transportation

Munich Planning Highway System For Cyclists 163

An anonymous reader writes: The German city of Munich has been looking for solutions to its traffic problem. Rush hour traffic is a parking lot, and public transit is near capacity. They think their best bet is to encourage (and enable) more people to hop on their bikes. Munich is now planning a Radschnellverbindungen — a highway system just for cyclists. Long bike routes will connect the city with universities, employment centers, and other cities. The paths themselves would be as free from disruption as possible — avoiding intersections and traffic lights are key to a swift commute. They'll doubtless take lessons from Copenhagen's bike skyway: "Cykelslangen (pronounced soo-cool-klag-en) adds just 721 feet of length to the city's 220 miles of bicycle paths, but it relieves congestion by taking riders over instead of through a waterfront shopping area."
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Munich Planning Highway System For Cyclists

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  • by Radical Moderate ( 563286 ) on Friday July 31, 2015 @03:40PM (#50225717)
    ...even then it was pretty bike friendly. It's interesting that in the article about the Copenhagen skyway, they cite pedestrians slowing bike traffic on the ground as an impetus for building the skyway. And the photo accompanying the article shows...a couple pedestrians walking down the center of the skyway *sigh*.
  • by Bananenrepublik ( 49759 ) on Friday July 31, 2015 @03:42PM (#50225739)

    Munich is growing faster than any time in recent history. Yet, for the first time in 50 years, no subway is being built. Leaving aside the reasons for this (mainly the German obsession with public debt), this is simply wrong, the two parts don't fit. Bulding more subways would help traffic more than bike highways (as much as I like them) -- and it would do so even in bad weather.

    What could be done? Well, one of the main problems is that the public transport infrastructure is organized in a way where basically every connection runs via the center. So even if your destination isn't on a straight line from where you're at towards the center, you will still have to go there, change trains and then move out on another radial line. Now, with the ever increasing numbers of passengers this leads to lots of congestion on the stations in the town center (anybody who has e.g. tried changing subway lines at Sendlinger Tor during the morning or evening rush hours can confirm this).

    The logical conclusion is of course to build a loop subway. Reduce dependency on the center and increase priority. This should become a priority.

    (It is perhaps noting that such a loop exists in the public transportation network, but it is a patchwork of tramways and busses. So the necessity was recognized already, only the implemented solution falls short.)

    • Munich is growing faster than any time in recent history. Yet, for the first time in 50 years, no subway is being built. Leaving aside the reasons for this (mainly the German obsession with public debt), this is simply wrong, the two parts don't fit.

      It is pretty dumb. Germany is full of brilliant engineers but they are terrible at economics. They need to divert export capacity towards viable domestic projects like this, rather than continuing to run huge trade surpluses that they then do nothing with (or worse: lend to people who are never going to pay them back). A small export tax to fund domestic infrastructure projects would be a logical step right now, and would help to protect the country from another global slowdown. Alas I imagine proposing suc

      • by 7-Vodka ( 195504 )

        Ha.

        1. Since when do you think Germany had a budget surplus? I ask this because a trade surplus isn't really a surplus of any kind. You want to reach into the pockets of other people for your pet project?
        2. It's nice to know that you think you can just divine out of your head some mythical set of desired public ends and think you also know off the top of your head how to use everyone's means without their permission to best achieve those ends. Hubris much?
        3. The cheek of someone who knows nothing of economics crit
    • Just let the cyclists have right of way like in Amsterdam.

      You can walk on the bike path but they will shoulder check you off the path.

      Your fault, your problem.

      Source: walking around Amsterdam feelin' kinda groovy, only got hit twice.

  • Actually from the OP and not just a stupid editor: "Cykelslangen (pronounced soo-cool-klag-en) " (fault of Wired.com)

    Cykels Langen - there is precisely zero chance that's pronounced soo-cool-klag-en.

    More likely, with a usually wierd euro-pronounciation of the "y" it's soocles-langen.

    I'm American, and I'm honestly not sure why Americans are SO BAD at pronouncing foreign words. Do we just see an unfamiliar collection of letters and what, just give up?

    • It's Cykelslangen and not Cykels Langen. Cykel is bike and Slange is snake so it's the Bicycle Snake (due to how the road wriggles around). Other than that you are dead on, the pronunciation from Wired.com is completely wrong.
      • by Misagon ( 1135 )

        I am not Danish, but I visit often and I think it is pronounced "sooglslangeh".
        Danish pronunciation is very soft on the consonants.

      • My point was that it's a compound word, and that can help parse out saying foreign words sometimes.

  • I just can't find any picture of the Cykelslangen with more than a few cyclist on it. For a route that relieves congestion in a busy area, you would expect it is full all the time, and that it looks busy on most pictures. But it doesn't. Strange.

  • My experience (Score:5, Interesting)

    by singularity ( 2031 ) * <nowalmartNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday July 31, 2015 @04:35PM (#50226219) Homepage Journal

    I live in Denver, and just moved. My previous commute was about 3.9 miles via bicycle, with about 2.5 miles of it on bike lanes. My new commute is 4.5 miles, with about 3.5 miles of it on a dedicate recreational path (Denver's Cherry Creek Trail), and the other 1 mile almost all on bike lanes.

    My new commute, while having a longer distance, takes me less time. In addition, it is a lot less stressful. The recreational path makes all the difference. It is limited access - there are ramps to the trail about every .2 miles - no motorized vehicles, and goes from my neighborhood (an urban residential-heavy area) to downtown.

    I have commuted via bicycle in a wide variety of cities on the East Coast and can say that this new commute is about as ideal as it could be. I dread the days I have to drive into work. Even without traffic (which doubles the time needed), it takes me longer to drive.

    A lot of US cities I have lived in see separated paths for recreational use only. They never seem to see that a trail going from residential areas to business areas can be a great encouragement for bicycle commuting.

    • One surprisingly bike-friendly city is Phoenix, which offers several hundred miles of off-road bike paths. And there may be only one train line, but it does go to the airport.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday July 31, 2015 @04:39PM (#50226265)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Guess we know where all of the Greek money went.

  • Ugh. So wrong and such a lousy transliteration it made me shiver.
  • with all the electric bikes/scooters/... coming out right now. i've seen a lot of those things lately: http://monowheel.info/?gclid=C... [monowheel.info]
  • I findi it slightly amusing and frightening that in a Democracy, the powers that be try to make you get out of your air-conditioned car, jump on a bike, and go your way to work. moreover...

    "[...]Lots of research ties increased cycling rates to social, economic, environmental, and health benefits. “We need a new form of infrastructure,” Kastrop says. "

    no source? and the "tie" could as well be the other way around: societies/communities wealthy enough to buy bikes but not cars have passed the hunger stage and are not getting fat yet, so they live longer: alternatively, this "green fixation" positively correlates with income, so rich communities, with higher education a

    • I findi [sic] it slightly amusing and frightening that in a Democracy, the powers that be try to make you get out of your air-conditioned car, jump on a bike, and go your way to work.

      Democracy isn't a system that enables absolute freedom. It's a system that allows one faction to impose their will on another faction. Taken to its extreme it becomes a tyranny of the masses.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      What you are missing is that many people would love to cycle but are put off buy the lack of cycling infrastructure or to put it another way cycling on roads with cars endangering your life constantly by not looking where they are going and passing too close is too stressful for a lot of people. But cycling without these stresses on decent cycling infrastructure is fun, keeps you fit and healthy, reduces stress, saves money and doesn't emit CO2 and a whole bunch of other pollutants.

  • They might also want to encourage shower and clothes-storage facilities at workplaces.... Just sayin'

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