As the London mayor nears the end of his time in office he looks back on what heâs achieved for cycling in the capital â and the hostility heâs faced. Read article
Daily Archives: 10 Mar '16
The Bike Wars Are Over, and the Bikes Won
When I accepted Mayor Bloombergâs offer to become Transportation commissioner, I told him I wanted to change the cityâs transportation status quo. The DOT had control over more than just concrete, asphalt, steel, and striping lanes. These are the fundamental materials that govern the entire public realm and, if applied slightly differently, could have a radical new impact. I saw no reason why New York couldnât become one of the worldâs great biking cities â or why it wouldnât want to. But the act of actually achieving it launched the bitterest public fight over transportation in this city since Jane Jacobs held the line against Robert Mosesâs Lower Manhattan Expressway half a century earlier. By the time the fight localized â in October 2010, when police attempted to control hundreds of dueling protesters for and against a new bike lane along Prospect Park â The Brooklyn Paper called the proposal âthe most controversial slab of cement outside the Gaza Strip.â Read article