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Jeremy Clarkson turns cycling advocate as he praises Copenhagen's approach

Bete noire of Britain's cyclists says Danes have got it right and created a city that's a delight to live in...

Jeremy Clarkson, the opinionated presenter of BBC motoring show Top Gear and bete noire of Britain’s cyclists, has said that he would live in Copenhagen “in a heartbeat” – and it’s all down to the city’s embrace of cycling as a means of getting around.

In an article that appeared in the InGear section of last weekend’s Sunday Times, Clarkson contrasts London, where despite Boris Johnson’s promised cycling revolution it’s fair to say the car remains king, with the approach adopted in the Danish capital which sees around one in three residents cycle to work or their place of study each day.

And it appears that Clarkson sees the Copenhagen model as the way forward to create cities that are better to live in.

"I suspect even the Danes are baffled about why they keep being picked out as a shining example of humanity at its best,” wrote Clarkson. “Just last week a newspaper in Copenhagen suggested it must be because, while cycling from place to place, visitors enjoy looking at all the pretty Danish girls’ bottoms.

"In fact, I’ve decided that the world’s five best cities are, in order: San Francisco, London, Damascus, Rome and Copenhagen. It’s fan-bleeding-tastic. And best of all: there are no bloody cars cluttering the place up. Almost everyone goes almost everywhere on a bicycle.

"Now I know that sounds like the ninth circle of hell, but that’s because you live in Britain, where cars and bikes share the road space,” he continues. “This cannot and does not work. It’s like putting a dog and a cat in a cage and expecting them to get along. They won’t, and as a result London is currently hosting an undeclared war. I am constantly irritated by cyclists and I’m sure they’re constantly irritated by me.

"City fathers have to choose. Cars or bicycles. And in Copenhagen they’ve gone for the bike.

"In Britain cycling is a political statement. You have a camera on your helmet so that motorists who carve you up can be pilloried on YouTube. You have shorts. You have a beard and an attitude. You wear a uniform. Cycling has become the outdoorsy wing of the NUM and CND.

"In Copenhagen it’s just a pleasant way of getting about. Nobody wears a helmet. Nobody wears high-visibility clothing. You just wear what you need to be wearing at your destination. For girls that appears to be very short skirts. And nobody rides their bike as if they’re in the Tour de France. This would make them sweaty and unattractive, so they travel just fast enough to maintain their balance.

"The upshot is a city that works. It’s pleasing to look at. It’s astonishingly quiet. It’s safe. And no one wastes half their life looking for a parking space. I’d live there in a heartbeat."

Although it may be premature for Pickfords to get on the phone to ask Clarkson whether he’s fixed a date to move, his piece does give food for thought; if the petrolhead-in-chief can see the merits of prioritising the bike over the motor car in the urban environment, there’s a glimmer of hope for us all.

It is of course possible to take issue with some of the points Clarkson makes. London, for example, is a very different city to Copenhagen, or Amsterdam, say, with a much greater area which means longer commutes for many of those who live in the city compared to the ones their Danish or Dutch counterparts have.

Then there’s the question of infrastructure. Cycling in Copenhagen or Amsterdam is not undertaken exclusively on segregated cycle paths; cyclists can, and do, ride on the road, but they are not choked by motor traffic to the extent London’s are, and the needs of bike riders are front of mind for planners, not an afterthought, including issues such as the provision of cycle parking.

Clarkson appears blissfully unaware that some of the conflict between motorists and cyclists – who, it should be remembered, are not mutually exclusive groups, with most adult cyclists also owning cars – could in part be due to attitudes encouraged by his own TV programme and newspaper columns.

And as the trade website Bike Biz, in its own report on Clarkson’s comments in the Sunday Times, points out, he is now on Twitter, and it’s inevitable that at some point he will use that medium to have a pop at Britain’s cyclists.

But that shouldn’t detract from the underlying message of his latest piece – encouraging people to use bicycles and not cars to get around does make cities a more pleasant place to live, not to mention the health and environmental benefits it brings.

With cycling pushed up the political agenda as a result of The Times newspaper’s Cities fit for Cycling campaign, itself building on the work of existing advocates of cycling, the fact that someone of Clarkson’s stature recognises the benefits that the bicycle can bring is progress.

Copenhagen, it should be remembered, isn’t a city that always embraced the bicycle to the extent it does now. It took a conscious effort on the part of city planners in the 1970s and 1980s to change policy that favoured the motor car and lay the groundwork for the present-day city that Clarkson now praises.

It didn’t happen overnight there, and London and other British cities won’t be transformed solely on the basis of one newspaper article; but if Jeremy Clarkson can see the appeal of cities built around cycling – cities, that is, built around people – that in itself is progress.

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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42 comments

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JohnS replied to giff77 | 12 years ago
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giff77 wrote:

Tad cynical but is the reason ole Jeremy likes CPH so much that there is no traffic jams preventing his progress in his overcompensating phallic symbol?

Correct. And he fancies Sarah Lund.

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paulfg42 | 12 years ago
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I don't have a camera or a beard but I do have shorts and an attitude. And you do irritate me, Clarkson.

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Animal | 12 years ago
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Fuck off Jeremy. I don't have a beard or a uniform.

Typical, shite from the shitemaster.

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Edgeley | 12 years ago
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All very good to have him appearing to be on "our side". But the danger of him wanting London to be like Copenhagen with bikes separated from cars is that he might extrapolate from there to the rest of the country, and suggest that bikes shouldn't be on the road anywhere. Charlbury as well as Chelsea, Chipping Norton as well as Chiswick.

He nearly hit me once, him driving badly in Woodstock and me going in the other direction passing a parked car. Not really relevant, of course, and lots of people nearly hit cyclists all the time! But it registers when it is him.

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cyclingslopes | 12 years ago
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To be honest people do drive in CPH but you also have to remember they also have excellent public transport that carries bikes unlike what we have in this country the trains underground all have facilities to carry bikes... also great bike lock up areas unlike the uk

so if we want to be more cycling savvy we need to enable public transport to have the decent facilities to carry bikes its a huge bug bear of mine as i used to take my bike on the train when we had the space on the trains to take them

also even on the front of the busses they have bike racks you can chuck a bike on if its to far to cycle..

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Carlton Reid | 12 years ago
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8th April. I only read it cos there was a full-page review of the Bike Hub app in the same section of the paper. And there was Clarkson, plugging cycling. Too good not to be put a story up on BikeBiz straight away.

Others have also said it must have been a column for the previous week...

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SevenHills | 12 years ago
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When you say last weekend's Sunday Times do you mean Sunday 8th April or the one before it, as that date makes Clarkson's St Paul on the road to Damascus like conversion all the more understandable if not believable.

I own both car and bike and beard and i to do not feel i am making a political statement by riding my bike. I ride because i enjoy it and because it helps me keep fit.

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zzgavin | 12 years ago
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I don't believe this will hurt cycling, might even help a bit. There are plenty of people who might use a bike for the short trip, where they now use a car. If Clarkson says cycling Copenhagen-style is good thing, then it might convince some of them to change. Cycling is a broad swathe of life, the utility cyclist is a lot of it.
The racing and sportive people here, myself amongst them, are merely the headline catching people in the cycling press. Yes, sportives are on the up, yes bike sales are up, but most people with a bike use it to ride to work or on a bridleway at the weekend. Cycling becoming safer is a city thing, it won't reach out to the 60/70mph encounters on country lanes for a long time.
I'm all for Clarkson encouraging cycling, the more people saying it is good the better. I'd love cities which I felt happy about my kids riding to school and the shops when they are a bit older. You've got to ignore the detail with Clarkson and hear the overall sweep. He said cycling is good in Copenhagen and that's the message people will remember. The rest is him cracking jokes, but "there are no bloody cars cluttering the place up. Almost everyone goes almost everywhere on a bicycle." is quite a pull quote.

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cat1commuter | 12 years ago
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"Cycling in Britain is a political football" would be more correct.

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cavasta | 12 years ago
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"In Britain cycling is a political statement. You have a camera on your helmet so that motorists who carve you up can be pilloried on YouTube. You have shorts. You have a beard and an attitude. You wear a uniform. Cycling has become the outdoorsy wing of the NUM and CND."

Eh? What on earth is he talking about?

1) "In Britain cycling is a political statement." I ride a bike for enjoyment/convenience/fitness, not to make a political statement.

2) "You have a camera on your helmet so that motorists who carve you up can be pilloried on YouTube." Or it's used to provide reliable evidence to uninterested police officers.

3) "You have a beard..." I achieve very satisfactory results from my daily wet shave using a traditional double edge blade (he says smuggly ;))

3) "You have shorts." Not when it's cold, I don't - only when the weather dictates. Bit like labourers on building sites wearing trousers in colder weather and shorts when it's warm.

4) "You wear a uniform." I dress for the occassion. Civies for short rides into town, "uniform" for day rides, etc. Except that it's not a uniform, just sensible, practical clothing suitable for the occassion and the weather.

5) "Cycling has become the outdoorsy wing of the NUM and CND." While motoring has become the indoor wing? Or does that make me as bonkers as him?

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Coleman | 12 years ago
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I knew it was too good to be true.

Cars or bikes? Nah. I've got one of the former and several of the latter.

Political statement? One of the reasons I cycle in London is to avoid an underground railway menaced by militant unions and buses full of hoi polloi.

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bartape | 12 years ago
1 like

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