There obviously more work to be done and I love that Chicago is so far ahead of so many cities when it comes to bicycle infrastructure.
Is this the same Chicago that sold all their parking meters to Wall Street making infrastructure changes really difficult because it would cut into parking meter profits?
Yeah and I kind of love it anyway. Since the sale, meter pricing has sky rocketed which discourages driving. Fuck cars!!
I was thinking that might be a thing. Actually kind of poetic. Love it.
Discouraging driving is good but when a city can’t close or repurpose roads because of a parking meter contract, it kind of sucks.
Can’t wait! Still would like to see fully protected bike lanes in Chicago. The waterfront trail is amazing though!
I live in small city where the exact opposite applies. The cycleways don’t extend through richer neighbourhoods. The poorer neighbourhoods are plastered with cycleways. But there’s lots of NIMBY people here.
I’m thinking that unless they also add a program to give low income Chicagoans bicycles, we’re going to see a crime wave. Just sayin’
why? why would added bicycle infrastructure = crime wave?
More people buying used bikes to ride in the new lanes and fewer people selling used bikes (that weren’t stolen) presumably.
There are plenty of charities that can do that, if needed because really bikes are cheap on the grand scheme of transportation options. Only the government can add bike lanes, that’s what they need to focus on.
Nice I can get shot on a bike now!
The concept of Chicago being super dangerous is a incorrect right wing meme.
It has half the violent crime rate of Memphis, for example. And that violence is highly concentrated in particular neighborhoods.
100%
Chicago is dope
Ok that’s great but that’s a weird reason to build bike lanes.
Chicago has a long history of segregation in the city. It’s worse than a lot of cities in the US. POC are leaving the city in droves because the city hasn’t well addressed the issues of the past. While I think wording it for pedestrian safety makes a lot of sense, this also makes sense in the context of Chicago