Singapore's Car Free Sunday is finally back! I had the opportunity to enjoy car free roads and absolutely loved it.
Visit Car Free Sunday's site for more updates;
https://carfreesunday2024.sg/
Visit my blog 📝:
https://itsvareck.wordpress.com/
Wanna treat me a cup of teh? Come support me at ☕️:
https://www.patreon.com/tehsiewdai
Find out more about Lorong Chencharu Bicycle Co-Op 🚲:
https://www.instagram.com/lcbc.sg
Music:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rxae3UZv_zI
If you'd like to see more transport and urban planning videos, please consider subscribing to my channel (:
Thanks for watching and have a good morning!
Bogota has this weird obsession with center-running bike lanes, but they have a ton of them. Physically separated, as well.
Random examples from street view: https://maps.app.goo.gl/Jrt5HXkSbNEqiRFS8 , https://maps.app.goo.gl/ve5Z8A7Tks3Gor7a9
My experience in many South American cities is that the bike lanes are short, disconnected, and winding. So that if you just want to take the main thoroughfares to commute, you can’t.
It feels like they design bike infrastructure for fun weekend trips, not as a replacement for cars (eg commuting to work, going to the grocery store, going to some government office, etc).
I hate bike paths that wind through parks, for example. I’m not opposed to having those, but only after we first buid a place to ride safely along all the main roads, including over bridges and under tunnels. Without having to go some ridiculous detour.
And with ample, secure, covered biking spots outside markets, malls, office buildings, government offices, and public transportation stops
I only visited Bogota briefly as a tourist, but my impression was that most of the bike lanes were on wide thoroughfares intended for commuting.