Skip to main content

Amsterdam’s Superbelangrijk campaign aimed at cyclists who text

An increasing number of accidents has forced Amsterdam city to launch a safety campaign aimed at stopping mostly young cyclists from texting while riding. With a view to incoming legislation, the city of Amsterdam in cooperation with GVB (Amsterdam City Transportation) and Vervoerregio Amsterdam (Amsterdam Regional Transport) started the Superbelangrijk campaign. Literally translated as Super-important, the campaign is to educate cyclists, as well as pedestrians, of the dangers of taking your eyes off the
February 1, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
No smartphone for smart cyclists

An increasing number of accidents has forced Amsterdam city to launch a safety campaign aimed at stopping mostly young cyclists from texting while riding.

With a view to incoming legislation, the city of Amsterdam in cooperation with GVB (Amsterdam City Transportation) and Vervoerregio Amsterdam (Amsterdam Regional Transport) started the Superbelangrijk campaign.

Literally translated as %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external Super-important Youtube website link false https://www.youtube.com/watch false false%>, the campaign is to educate cyclists, as well as pedestrians, of the dangers of taking your eyes off the road to use your phone, be it dialing numbers, talking or texting.

People tend to believe that every message and phone call is “super important”, according to the campaign. "And it is super important that we become aware of the major risks of telephone use in traffic - especifically for pedestrians and cyclists. Super important, this campaign."

In December minister of infrastructure Cora van Nieuwenhuizen announced that the national government is working on legislation to ban texting and cycling by 2020.

The legislation and Amsterdam’s efforts are the result of the number of collisions involving cyclists and pedestrians apparently rising, according to Dutch media reports.

The increase in accidents comes as a rise in the use of smartphones in traffic, according to the campaign. However, a link between the use of phones and cycling and walking accidents has not been proven.

"Although there are no research figures on the relationship between this, it is clear that distraction is a major cause of many accidents,” notes the campaign. “Using your phone simply distracts you from what is happening around you. Checking a message just takes a second, but that second of looking away can be fatal."

Related Content

  • VIDEO captures unloved, unowned Reynolds Bridge reduced to rubble
    May 18, 2015
    There was a big bang in a small town in the US state of Pennsylvania this month when a fragmentation explosion brought down the 100-year-old Reynolds Road Bridge. It was the end to the unloved bridge near Factoryville, population around 1,500. Factoryville is notable for a lack of factories ever since the one and only plant, a wool-into-cloth factory, closed down several years after it opened in the 1800s. Local residents were not sorry to see the felling of the 40m long, reinforced concrete arch deck
  • PPRA Niagara Falls: getting better value for road maintenance budgets
    August 19, 2015
    Larger road budgets would go a long way towards maintaining in top shape highway infrastructure across the United States and Canada. But even considering what is being spent now, are road owners and highway contractors getting the biggest bang for their buck? That’s what delegates to this year’s Pavement Preservation Recycling Alliance conference in the beautiful Canadian resort city of Niagara Falls will find out from October 13-15. “One of the things that I learned in Paris at the first Pavement Preser
  • New trailer technology from Goldhofer
    January 6, 2017
    Transportation specialist Goldhofer is introducing a range of new semitrailer and low loader solutions. The new models include innovations in Goldhofer’s heavy-duty modules, as well as trailers and semitrailers for the construction sector. Improved payload capacities, steering performance and ride quality are all claimed. These new trailers are said to be stronger and more durable, as well as benefiting from increased versatility.
  • New trailer technology from Goldhofer
    March 26, 2013
    Transportation specialist Goldhofer is introducing a range of new semitrailer and low loader solutions. The new models include innovations in Goldhofer’s heavy-duty modules, as well as trailers and semitrailers for the construction sector. Improved payload capacities, steering performance and ride quality are all claimed. These new trailers are said to be stronger and more durable, as well as benefiting from increased versatility.