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yftsui | 1 year ago

I love the fact that bike lane supporters are always winning in these arguments: if bike lane works we should get more; if bike lane doesn't work it means it is not enough thus we should get even more.

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stop50|1 year ago

Would you use an car if you have streets that are like bike lanes now? lets make a thought experiment:

You are an car driver. There are car lanes and tank lanes. the car lanes are less than a percent of the tank lanes. Regulary people die, because a tank driver overlooked a car, car lanes are often obstructed by parking tanks. Nobody but an minority of car drivers care. In newspapers often the car drivers get the blame when an accident happens if they are reported, often even deadly accidents are unreported or just an small note.

acdha|1 year ago

Look, almost every large study has found that bike lanes reduce congestion because, when you get down to it congestion is made up of cars and the only way to have less of it is to reduce the number of cars on the road. Whether that’s biking, transit, carpooling, etc. doesn’t matter as long as you’re reducing the total number of cars – the math of needing over 100 square feet per person is just brutally unforgiving. Urban areas don’t have the space, rural areas usually don’t have the money, and nobody wants the health impacts or pollution.

bryanlarsen|1 year ago

There's probably a point where additional bike lanes are not helpful. But Toronto is very far from that point.

Car driving in the Netherlands is far superior to driving in Toronto. Once Toronto gets to the bike lane saturation that Dutch cities have, we might be close to reaching the point where more bike lanes make things worse rather than better.