Life could be so car-free

April 21st, 2008

A great little bit of anarchy hear in Los Angeles.

Yes, it’s illegal to ride your bike on most freeways, including the stretches of the 405 and the 101 these folks are riding, but what a fine piece of subversion this is. And truth be told, when traffic is that thick, what they’re doing is safer than riding surface streets.. Intersections are where the vast majority of accidents occur with any vehicles. With bicycles, the most common collisions involve a car turning right or left into a rider’s path. Freeways remove that problem and, considering that traffic is at a virtual standstill, problems from differences in speed are also negated.

A bicycle “freeway” could be just the thing the city needs to make bike commuting a viable alternative for many - and I don’t mean bike paths and trails that meander through parks and beaches or hug the Los Angeles river with casual riders ambling along at 10 miles per hour, but something that actually moves commuters quickly and safely to useful destinations. Someone cycling from Santa Monica to downtown could probably shorten their ride by a good half hour if they rode on the 101 and didn’t have to contend with stop lights and intersections. In rush hour I can assure you they’d do it faster than a car making the same trip.

At the start of the 20th century, Los Angeles had the right idea with the beginnings of an elevated wooden bikeway from downtown to Pasadena. Unfortunately that was scrapped as the automobile rapidly gained in popularity, but imagine how things would have been different if cars had come along a bit later, and a bikeway infrastructure was already in place and proven to be a viable method of transportation. How many people would opt for the car then?

I’m not saying cars don’t have their place, but would we really still need to build 8-lane freeways? Just imagine how many thousands of acres of land could be used for things other than asphalt. This photo from Germany is a pretty good illustration of that. It shows the amount of space required to move the same number of people by car, bus, and bicycle.

Tomorrow is Earth Day, and in honor of that, a portion of Wilshire Boulevard between Western and Harvard is declaring itself car-free for the day. While that doesn’t affect my usual commute at all (I work on Wilshire but ride on Melrose), I’ll be swinging by during my lunch break to check it out and support the gesture as it’s a really great thing to see this kind of support coming from the city.


4 Responses to “Life could be so car-free”

  1. Bujiatang on April 22, 2008 6:46 am

    Like the Midtown Greenway in Minneapolis.

    The best way to get downtown is not by car (I hate driving in Minnapolis, there is always roadwork and craziness).

  2. Streetsblog » Cyclists Zip Down Clogged LA Freeways on April 23, 2008 9:35 am

    [...] blogs have picked up the video. Metblog called it "equal parts stupid and awesome," and Joke Is Up calls it a "great little bit of anarchy here in Los Angeles." Viewers at YouTube seem [...]

  3. Kieron on April 24, 2008 7:45 pm

    Actually they are riding on the 10-W and then the 10-W to the 405-N in that video.

    Also, it’s good to note that up in Portland and most of Oregon, cyclists ride on the freeway all the time.

    Nice post!

  4. Flunky Carter on April 29, 2008 9:41 pm

    Los Angeles does DEH MOTS!!! Bicycles>cars.

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    The Joke Is Up is a collection of pontifications, narrations, and futile pretensions from the mind and mouth of myself, Jon Jandoc.

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