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"Enlisting Bikes In the Fight Against Inequality"

(4 posts)

  1. PS
    Member

    Another interesting article on the Citylab website, this time about bike infra in Baltimore.

    Posted 8 years ago #
  2. chdot
    Admin

    Thanks PS.

    Am reposting this from "Hull" thread -

    "In Edinburgh working-class accents they were complaining that it was a load of posh folk who cycled who wanted this, and cyclists were a menace anyway, getting off roads and onto pavements."

    Some truth in all of that.

    It's partly about geography and historical (in)actions.

    Edinburgh has Marchmont, Morningside, the New Town etc.

    Full of University staff and students and other current (or potential) cyclists. They exist there partly because Edinburgh was too slow/conservative to get round to building its inner ring roads.

    It's impossible to know if "a load of posh folk" mean 'people more middle class and/or richer than us'.

    It's a pity that some people think that 'cycling's not for us' for artificial reasons. It's possible to spend vast amounts on bikes (as it is for cars), but few can genuinely not afford to own/run a bike.

    Whether they have secure storage space or travel requirements that a bike would fit are clearly genuine issues.

    There have been discussions within CEC over many years about 'should we spend cycling money on areas where people cycle or where they don't'.

    The pragmatic and practical answer has always been (mostly) the former.

    The current Edinburgh 'fuss' is about Leith Walk to Roseburn - very much City Centre/where people cycle.

    It's only very recently that the idea of 'extending to the Gyle' has been a thing.

    Maybe 2017 - before and after the election - should be used to have serious thoughts about where people live/work/could cycle.

    Obviously a lot of it is in the ATAP, but maybe time for a wider (outside the 'cycle community') debate?

    Posted 8 years ago #
  3. chdot
    Admin

    SRD has also started a thread with a link to this -

    "

    Jacobs outlines an increasing distrust of politicians and politics, a burgeoning new urban crisis in cities, worsening environmental degradation, entrenched segregation, and an “enlarging gulf between rich and poor along with attrition of the middle class” as signals and symptoms of a coming Dark Age.

    "

    http://www.citylab.com/politics/2016/12/did-jane-jacobs-predict-the-rise-of-trump/509987

    Posted 8 years ago #
  4. chdot
    Admin

    "

    The city wants and needs more people to make journeys by foot and by pedal. This is even more so when we see how close the canal is to Wester Hailes, Sighthill and Broomhouse, where some of the city’s pockets of real poverty are found. In the Calders 80% of the residents don’t have access to cars (a supreme irony given how landlocked the neighbourhood is by super-busy roads). What would the impact be if the canal were much more connected to the residents’ lives, both as a source of wellbeing and leisure but also as a route into the city. What an opportunity that would be!.

    "

    http://www.edinburghgreens.org.uk/site/blog/canal-city-deal

    Posted 8 years ago #

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