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  1. #1

    In your opinion has Biking become more popular in NYC over the last 5-10 years?

    I have heard/read that biking is becoming more popular in NYC - is this true?

    Thanks.
    Last edited by bikecommuter99; 01-18-12 at 08:09 PM.

  2. #2
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    Number of bicycle commuters has more than doubled

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  4. #3
    Car-Free Flatlander Stacy's Avatar
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    Have you tried riding the Westside Greenway on a nice warm day? No doubt!

  5. #4
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    Until a few months ago I was lucky if I was on a bike once a month now I commute on it every day so we got one more bike commuter on the road. I also live in an area where not too many people ride bikes so it is a bigger step for me to start riding than if you are in an area where theres a bike lane every block.
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  6. #5
    car guy, recovering aixaix's Avatar
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    Not opinion: fact. Tons more bikes in NYC, with bike stores doing quite well in a down market. Walking in Manhattan ten years ago it was unusual to pass more than a couple of bikes locked up, and most were delivery bikes. Now they are everywhere: you can count dozens on an average block in the Village, LES, Soho or Chelsea, and plenty uptown and in the FD as well. The increase has been mostly in the last 5-6 years.

    We are looking more like Philadelphia, except for the taller buildings and not rioting when we win sports championships.
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  7. #6
    -=Barry=- The Human Car's Avatar
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    My time frame is 15 years since the last time I road NYC. And the number of cyclists that you see on any given day is just crazy compared to back then.
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  8. #7
    Senior Member Papa Tom's Avatar
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    Meanwhile, it seems like fewer and fewer people are riding out here on Long Island, where the roads are supposedly so much more conducive to biking. The truth (for me) is that it's too dangerous with so many people texting and jabbering behind the wheel. Fortunately, my bike commute is only a mile or two each day.
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    There are talks about a bike rental program where people can get picks at certain bike rack locations and lock it back up somewhere closer to their destination at a different part of the city.

  10. #9
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    definitely lots more. I've been riding for a long time and the last few years have exploded. I used to be the only rider on Navy St in Brooklyn, now there are lots. The first few time I rode 9w and the GWB I was the only one there. That was a VERY long time ago, maybe 40 years.

    But even over the last 10 or so, it just looks like a lot more people are riding. I commute on 1st Ave from the Manhattan Bridge and there is a steady stream up to around 23rd St, where it drops off. It is of course mostly a young crowd. Obviously I don't quite qualify for that crowd. You used to be able to sign up for the 5BBT on the day of the event. Nowadays you need to enter a lottery. The bike lanes invite people to ride and they do.

  11. #10
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    I should mention too that my unscientific counts of cyclists over the Manhattan Bridge when I take the subway have gone steadily up. When I first started doing this 4 years ago, 10 - 15 cyclists on a trip across the bridge would be the norm in nice weather. Spring was the busiest, with a drop-off when the weather got hot. This past year it was always 20-30 each trip across. The most I had ever seen was 34 over the prior 3 years, on one trip home to Brooklyn on a nice September day in 2011 I counted 61, a veritable traffic jam!

    So yes, biking is way up.

  12. #11
    car guy, recovering aixaix's Avatar
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    You talkin'a me? Yeah, we got more bikes in NY. You gotta problem wit' dat?

    It is going to take some time for motorists & pedestrians to get used to it, as well as bike riders to learn when to be patient and accommodating, and when and how to express their ire. There's a lot of jostling going on right now, between riders, walkers, drivers, City Hall, the police & businesses. It is fascinating to see how the city learns to handle this change.
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  13. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by bikecommuter99 View Post
    I have heard/read that biking is becoming more popular in NYC - is this true?

    Thanks.
    It varies by social class.

    I see more bicycle commuting and use by wealthier individuals that can live in low crime areas near where they work. I also a lot of use by individuals I would speculate are illegal immigrants possibly because they are not able to get a driver's license. People get delivery of meals usually delivered by bicycle or electric bicycle ridden by someone who is probably working illegally.

    Intense enforcement of motor vehicle laws, such as not riding on sidewalks, applied to bicycles in poor black areas seems to be discouraging bicycle use there.

    See: Bikes Yikes chapter of the book Arrest Proof yourself (based on South Carolina law)

    http://books.google.com/books?id=TTG...page&q&f=false

    Police stop bicyclist for not having headlight, bicyclist eventually shot.
    http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?se...les&id=8514424

    Please do not comment on if the shooting was justified, I only point this out to show that bicycling is more problematic in poor areas do to police enforcement of motor vehicle rules.
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  14. #13
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    I think in order for cyclists and motorist to coexist peacfully the law does have to become more strict for cyclists. Motor vehicle laws are understood and obeyed by [most] motorists while bicyclists are un predictable. "Is that guy going to stop at that read light or am i going to smash into him as i pass my green?"
    The guy that was shot on his bike was shot for evading police and inevidable arrest. Though it seems LAPD are becoming famous for mistaking any hand movement for reaching for a gun. He wasn killed for riding a bike without a headlight. People in poor areas have to live by the same rules as everyone else. The problem is that they can't or dont't want to and thats why it sucks so bad to live there.

  15. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Papa Tom View Post
    Meanwhile, it seems like fewer and fewer people are riding out here on Long Island, where the roads are supposedly so much more conducive to biking. The truth (for me) is that it's too dangerous with so many people texting and jabbering behind the wheel. Fortunately, my bike commute is only a mile or two each day.
    The fact is that LI is NOT VERY bike friendly. I ride all along the South Shore from Oceanside to Bayshore and rarely see a painted or marked bike lane. I do about 2500 miles a year on my road bike. Yet every time I ride and move into a traffic lane to turn or pass parked cars some driver will honk or curse at me. They yell at me to "Get off the road". I wear highly visible clothing and use hand signals at all corners to let drivers know my intentions but they still try to push me off "their" road. There are very few "Share the road" signs and virtually no effort to educate drivers. I also see many cyclists riding against traffic or with no lights at night or riding with their earphones in. There really needs to be public service announcements educating cyclists and motorist. LI is not very rider friendly. Its hard to believe and very sad that Manhattan is actually more bike friendy than the suburbs of LI. If the congested roadways of NYC can be made safer and more bike friendly then why can't the same be done in Nassau and Suffolk.

  16. #15
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    The only place I have EVER ridden a bike on Long Island is in Long Beach/Atlantic Beach from Rockaway. It's OK only because the traffic is so light on the road, at least until you get to the west end. And the laid back beach attitude there helps.

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