Skip to main content

Tackling congestion – with tough decisions

As editor of World Highways, information is provided on a great deal of revolutionary new traffic technology. Some of these new innovations offer major advantages in cutting congestion; smart systems that can regulate traffic flow or reduce risks for commuters. But it is worth remembering too that some of the solutions to urban transportation, as well as cutting urban pollution, have been around for a very long time. The humble bicycle is a highly efficient machine for transportation over comparatively shor
July 8, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
As editor of World Highways, information is provided on a great deal of revolutionary new traffic technology. Some of these new innovations offer major advantages in cutting congestion; smart systems that can regulate traffic flow or reduce risks for commuters. But it is worth remembering too that some of the solutions to urban transportation, as well as cutting urban pollution, have been around for a very long time. The humble bicycle is a highly efficient machine for transportation over comparatively short distances. Bicycles take up little road space, cause next to no wear and tear on road surfaces and have no exhaust emissions.

In congested European cities for example, with narrow streets that may date back centuries and high population densities, using personal motor vehicle transport can make little sense. Anyone who has sat in a traffic jam in a major city in their car should appreciate that for short journeys at least, using four wheels can be a time-wasting and frustrating exercise.

The authorities in the Dutch city of Amsterdam found in the 1970s that the road fatality rate was spiralling ever upwards, and resolved to do something about it. Tough parking restrictions were imposed, while cycling facilities were improved, along with a massive investment in public transport.

Despite its comparatively high population density, Amsterdam has a low rate of traffic congestion. It is worth noting too that the Netherlands, due in part to its high rate of cycling, also has amongst the longest average lifespans of any country in the world. While the Netherlands does have the benefits of western healthcare in this respect, the fact that so many people exercise regularly by cycling has to be a factor in why the Dutch live longer than their European neighbours.

Nor is Amsterdam alone in championing the bicycle. Danish capital Copenhagen has just as high a percentage of cyclists on its roads, with car commuting also representing a low percentage of its city traffic.

Other cities in the world are beginning to take note, with Munich (perhaps ironically, the home of car manufacturer BMW), Berlin, London, Paris, Mexico City, San Francisco and Seattle amongst those keen to encourage more people to cycle instead of driving.

In looking ahead to the future of transport, some believe that driverless cars could take the place of public transport. But this seems a wild claim and driverless cars seem most likely to take the place of rideshare vehicles or taxis.

The real future for urban commuting could well lie with a combination of cycling and public transport.

For more topics like this, visit 3260 World Highways website

Mike Woof, EDITOR
%$Linker: 2 Email <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkEmail [email protected] false mailto:[email protected]?subject=email%[email protected] true false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Zoomlion finds buyers for both cranes brought to INTERMAT
    April 19, 2012
    Zoomlion is celebrating a successful visit to INTERMAT after selling both the tower crane and the crawler crane that it brought to the show. The T320-16 tower crane has been sold to Germany rental company Streif Baulogistik, which operates a fleet of hundreds of cranes in Germany and Poland. The T320-16 combines Chinese and European know-how, as it features technology from Jost. Dutch end-user Crane House has brought the Zoomlion QUY 80 crawler crane. Zoomlion chief operating officer Delfino Corti said that
  • It’s a deadly business for contractors painting road markings
    August 4, 2015
    Animal welfare groups in the Republic of Ireland are angry over the apparent insensitive act by a road making contractor who painted a yellow line over a dead cat on the side of the highway. A report by Irish newspapers quoted one person saying it was “shameful” and “nobody cared enough to move this poor cat who had been killed by a car and the line was painted over it”.
  • Video: Wheelchair user hitches car ride up a hill
    November 12, 2015
    A wheelchair user was recently caught hitching a ride up a hill in the Brazilian city of Salvador. It’s slow progress, as the video shows, and care was taken by the driver to deliver his “passenger”. It is not known if the wheelchair owner had to pay for his external ride. His feat was not the first time he has picked up a lift, according to media reports that quote some of his neighbours. Media have also said the city is one of Brazil’s worst for getting around if you are in a wheelchair. The head
  • VIDEO: Life in the deteriorating lane – Pennsylvania Turnpike
    October 17, 2016
    Nothing lasts forever, including – and perhaps especially – highways. One fine example of this is a 21km section of the original 580km Pennsylvania Turnpike in the US state of Pennsylvania.

    As the video shows, vegetation, animals and cyclists have slowly been reclaiming part of what was hailed as an engineering masterpiece when it was opened in 1940.