It’s really dangerous to ride a bike on the roads in my 3rd world city even walking is dangerous due to bike lanes basically being ignored, motorcycles weaving around traffic, and poor nighttime lighting.

I just thought that dedicated bike/walking only roads connecting the major parts of my city would be a big boost for safety and I think it would greatly reduce the amount of people using cars.

Has this been tried somewhere else? Was it successful?

  • BreakerSwitch@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Stateside the big one I know is the Minneapolis greenway, which is a proper road reserved just for bikes and occasional buses. There are a handful of rails to trails projects all over, but I don’t think they’re quite what you have in mind

  • Scipitie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 months ago

    Oh boy, strap in, you’re entering a world full of glory but also sadness because it’s not your reality :(

    The short: yes and it’s even wide spread in some countries. Even in car obsessed Germany it’s usual to have either separate bike lanes or walking/biking only areas. Not wide spread or where we need it from my point of view but it does exist.

    And then there’s Amsterdam. The only place I’m aware of the has a dedicated Wikipedia page(!) just about it’s cycling infrastructure:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycling_in_Amsterdam

    But this is not only a western thing. From what I’ve read and heard Singapore for example has an amazing infrastructure for waling and biking as well.

    • Humanius@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      As a Dutchman, Amsterdam is fine but it is not the prime example of how to build cycling infrastructure. It’s quite busy and hectic, and there are many places around the country that simply do it better.

      Groningen is usually the main example used for a great city to cycle in, and Houten is a good example of suburbia that prioritizes cycling.

      I live in Eindhoven, and I’d even argue that cycling here is less hectic and stressful than cycling in Amsterdam (though Eindhoven is historically one of the more car-brained cities in the Netherlands)

      Edit: Worth noting that Amsterdam isn’t bad. It’s probably still better than most cities around the world in terms of cycling infrastructure.

      • huppakee@piefed.social
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        4 months ago

        Amsterdam is quite ok really, except for the crowded city center because there is barely any space between the buildings. This leads to the same chaos as big cities in developing countries (everybody is everywhere).

        They try a lot harder then Eindhoven, which is a shame because Eindhoven actually is roomy enough for dedicated space for everyone.

        Shout out to Not Just Bikes, he has tons of video footage on cycling in the Netherlands.

    • Ugandan Airways@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      The more popular parts of the beltline are basically unrideable on the weekends, with wall to wall people. Atlanta could be a great bike city—a year round bikable city—if they weren’t so focused on cars. It’s sad.

      • Cort@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        One of the towns I ride through has a really busy/dense section of the bike & pedestrian trail that splits into a pedestrian only section and a bike only section for 2 miles. The bike section always has people walking on it during the weekends, even when there’s plenty of room on the pedestrian side. Most weekends are still rideable, but some days I just ride in the street so it doesn’t take half an hour to go 3 miles.

  • Pommes_für_dein_Balg@feddit.org
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    4 months ago

    My home town built a bicycle-only bridge with a road surface that’s heated to slightly above freezing in winter.
    It’s the shortest connection between 2 major districts:

    There’s also a bicycle tunnel under the old town:

  • hanke@feddit.nu
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    4 months ago

    Check out Amsterdam and Copenhagen!

    I currently live in Malmö, Sweden which is not as known for this, but is one of the best cities for biking in Sweden.

    I have lived in smaller towns in Sweden with great bike infra as well.

    It is not unusual, it all depends on the city planners to not blow 100% of the budget on cars.

    • Ugandan Airways@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      I was just in Copenhagen and went over to Malmo for a day. Just want to say that you live in a great city. Loved my time there and the people.

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    4 months ago

    Not quite the same but my area has walkways and trails in park and forest preserve areas that can kinda be used. As someone mentioned the park ones can get crowded but are great if you just time it right. Like at one point I had a 3 mile bike ride but I would bike to miles to get to the lake front trail and do the three miles on it then bike 2 miles back in the morings because it was just so great. Opposite of what you sorta looked for as I more than doubled my commute and even increase my time on road bike lanes but again. soooooo nice.