Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
E-bike users, I get that you don't want all of your stuff to get stolen, but would it be possible to not take up the whole bloody rack?!?
It's happened several times in recent weeks that there aren't enough spots for everyone because an e-bike is locked sideways along the rack, taking up the space that could be used by 5-6 regular bikes or more.
Even in places with lots of racks, two or three e-bikes parked this way greatly cuts down on the space available for everyone.
|
That's why the individual bike "ring and posts" are better for locking bikes than bike corrals.
Once we hit a critical mass of bikes, which might be coming soon, we should move to the Dutch model of having self-locking bikes that you can park anywhere.
When it comes to cycling adoption, we've only focused on the physical infrastructure (bike lanes, signals, etc.) part of the equation. There's also "regulating" how bikes are designed and how they run so that they all behave in predictable, controllable ways similar to road legal cars. In the Netherlands bikes are single or, at most, three geared models with relatively fat tires that work well as slicks, fenders, and relatively few exposed moving parts. They're like the Toyota Corollas of bicycles, and bike traffic is predictable even at huge volumes. It's very hard to pass the slowest rider on your bike at, say, four times their speed, or other forms of behaviour that limit throughput and turn more timid people off cycling.
Meanwhile, over here, the sheer variety of bikes on the road would be like if our highways had everything from Formula 1 cars to tanks to cars people built themselves. Obviously, the dangers/stakes are lower with bikes than with cars, but the outcome is that it hinders truly widespread adoption of cycling because bicycle behaviour is a free for all.