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Amsterdam brings forward bike-friendly measures as cycling continues to grow

Narrow streets and overcrowded cycle racks struggling to cope with volume of cyclists

Amsterdam is bringing forward measures aimed at helping cyclists as well as creating thousands of additional cycle parking spaces and removing abandoned bikes as the popularity of bicycles as a form of transport threatens to overwhelm infrastructure in the Dutch capital.

The Amsterdam College of Mayor and Alderpersons, which governs the city, says that its cyclists now rack up a combined daily total of 2 million kilometres, and bicycle usage has grown by 40 per cent during the past two decades, with the number of journeys each day growing from 340,000 in 1990 to 490,000 in 2008.

As a result, according to the city authorities, and with almost six in ten Amsterdammers riding a bike each day, “narrow bike lanes are having to accommodate an increasing volume of bicycle traffic,” while “overcrowded cycle racks near stations are also beginning to adversely affect accessibility.”

Two years ago, the city published its Long-Term Cycle Plan (Meerjarenplan Fiets) which envisaged spend of €200 million on cycling until 2040, of which €170 million will be spent on creating 40,000 new cycle parking spaces.

The figures do not include spending on the bicycle network beyond 2016, which the city says "are largely financed from the available resources for road reconstructions."

Besides meeting existing demand, that investment is being made to meet forecasts of continued increases in cycling, including 10 per cent growth in journeys in the city centre and 25 per cent growth in cycling to and from railway stations.

This week the city confirmed that a number of projects aimed at easing the crisis in cycle parking at Amsterdam Central station, Leidseplein and the ‘Rode Loper’ zone that follows the route of the new Noord-Zuid metro line, will be finished or nearing completion by 2016. There will also be parking for 3,000 bikes in a dedicated facility near Station Zuid, as well as 800 spaces close to other railway stations.

The city also says it will also carry out research on a variety of issues that it believes can benefit Amsterdam’s cyclists, including bringing in “green wave” co-ordinated traffic lights for cyclists to help improve cycling traffic flow, giving more space to bike riders at junctions and appointing an official to oversee the disposal of abandoned bikes.

Other measures that it will research include:

A large-scale drive to remove disused bikes from cycle racks

The extended introduction of a maximum permitted time at cycle parking spaces (already in effect in some places in the city)

Additional (temporary) cycle parking facilities near Amsterdam Central Station and

Pop-up bicycle storage locations which can be set up as and where required.

Alderperson Maarten van Poelgeest, the official in charge of the city’s traffic, said: “Amsterdam benefits from more people using bikes and has a pressing need to create additional space for cyclists.

“Cycling is cheap, fast and clean while it also helps improve accessibility in the city.

“In addition, the increased bicycle usage in the city equates to annual savings for Amsterdam of €20 million on public transport and another €20 million on car infrastructure.”

A summary in English of Amsterdam’s Long-Term Cycling Plan can be downloaded here.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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8 comments

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HKCambridge | 10 years ago
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I think commentators here might be making too light of the issue. This is a genuine problem. It might be be a problem lots of the UK is unlikely to ever encounter, but a problem none-the-less.

If nothing else, if the cycle lanes are that overloaded, and given in Holland cyclists don't ride on the road, how long before taking the car is quicker than cycling?

There are other issues here. Is it just to take space from pedestrians to accommodate cyclists? That surely is an issue in the UK in some places.

Or reverse that: is it time to start favouring pedestrians in Amsterdam, given that they take up less space and don't need parking?

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nbrus | 10 years ago
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They should swap their bicycles for unicycles to save space.  39

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KnightBiker | 10 years ago
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Well, it's not that i want to see it differently, but the amount of bicycles is just staggering in Amsterdam if you think about it. But yes, if people don't use it indeed the infrastructure is wrong, but it's a hard job designing it the right way.

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farrell | 10 years ago
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Too many bishycle peeepulsh...

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gazza_d | 10 years ago
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If the dutch are unhappy that there are loads of bikes parked all over the place and Amsterdam is too full of bikes, then they are quite welcome to come to the UK. Would be a bike-free utopia to them.

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KnightBiker | 10 years ago
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One of the other first world problem here in Amsterdam is to get the cyclist to use the bicycle-parking facility's. Most people park their bikes were ever they can causing obstacles in front of Cinema's, public buildings and supermarkets even if there are options less then 50 meters away.

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teaboy replied to KnightBiker | 10 years ago
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KnightBiker wrote:

One of the other first world problem here in Amsterdam is to get the cyclist to use the bicycle-parking facility's. Most people park their bikes were ever they can causing obstacles in front of Cinema's, public buildings and supermarkets even if there are options less then 50 meters away.

Of course they do. That's what everyone does, everywhere and with every mode of transport. People want to park their cars directly outside their house, and right outside of shops (just watch drivers in supermarket car parks ignore empty spaces in the hope there's one nearer the door).

As a Dutchman once said "If cyclists ignore the infrastructure then the infrastructure is wrong".

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Argos74 | 10 years ago
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First world problems...

//i.imgur.com/vOI9Qdz.jpg)

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