Showing posts with label Copenhagenize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copenhagenize. Show all posts
16 November 2014
Cycling Without Age ~ Kassow's Rides @ TEDx
Copenhagenize's Mikael shares the TEDx talk by Ole Kassow who created the Cycling Without Age movement...
05 August 2014
Bicycle Innovations ~ Streetfilms on Copenhagen!
Mikael Colville-Andersen from Copenhagenize spotlights The Green Waves of Copenhagen and points to a nice little Streetfilm about Bicycle Innovations...
"The busiest bicycle street in the world has changed! Now the Knippelsbro Bridge boasts 40,700 riders per day! And speaking of bridges, Copenhagen is building SIX new bike/ped only bridges to help its citizens get around easier. Last month another cool bridge debuted -- the Cykelslangen "Cycle Snake" or "The Snake". You'll see lots of footage as we travelled back and forth over it. It is truly a work of beauty and the riding is incredibly smooth. Even going uphill seems pretty easy! You'll see lots of other things that will make you happy (or angry your city isn't doing it!) Including waste baskets angled for cyclists, LED lights that indicate whether riders have to speed up to catch the green wave, and a cool treatment for cobblestone streets that helps make biking easier."
25 December 2013
Cargo Bikes ~ Urban Logistics History & Races!
Mikael Colville-Andersen over at Copenhagenize spotlights a great, often underappreciated element of urban logistics -- Cargo Bikes! First, a steady stream of photographic examples now gathered together as the Cargo Bike Nation book!
Second, an Episode of their Top 10 Design Elements in Copenhagen's Bicycle Culture. Third, a spotlight on the Cyclelogistics initiative. Fourth, a pointer to a Spectacular Cargo Bike Collection in Italy with a free e-book by Felino Tassi about Nello Sandrinelli's passion for vintage cargo bikes! And finally, they're crowdfunding a cargo bike race in Rio de Janeiro -- Campeonato Carioca de Cargueiras...
27 August 2013
Cycle Path Details ~ Micro Design Really Matters!
Copenhagenize has nice video series on cycling infrastructure with latest installment spotlighting Micro Design ~ Top 10 Design Elements in Copenhagen's Bicycle Culture... One of my favorite nuggets is their Hold On+Foot Rest...
Mark Wagenbuur from BicycleDutch has numerous posts on cycle path details, including Drainage in NL...
And here Mark spotlights David's video of NL's red cyclepath construction...
"The City of Copenhagen has implemented this double railing simply as a convenience for the cyclists who stop here. A high railing to grasp with your hand and a foot railing for putting your foot up..."

"With so many people cycling in the Netherlands and with the average amount of precipitation in their country, the Dutch need a system that keeps the infrastructure dry without endangering all those people cycling. And of course the Dutch have such a system. Key difference to some of the other systems of the world is that the openings for rain water to get into the sewer system are not horizontally in the street surface, but vertically set in the kerbs [...] As a cyclist you do not have to ride over these openings that way and that makes all the difference."David Hembrow's View From the Cycle Path spots many details, including latest piece on Bollards, both horrible and acceptable examples...
"Bollards appear primarily where cycling routes meet driving routes. They're also used to prevent minor roads from being used for through journeys (segregating modes without a cycle-path and helping to unravel driving routes from cycling routes) and in other places, for example to discourage parking of cars where they are not wanted."Latest designs include flexible bollards... And this David Hembrow piece on Angled Curbs...
"Parallel kerbs can be quite dangerous for cyclists. A slight lapse of concentration and you can be off your bike, and possibly injured badly [...] The kerb shown here is one of many "forgiving" 45 degree kerbs in use in Assen. These kerbs make it possible to cross from the cycle path to the pedestrian path without falling from your bike. They reduce the risk of injury due to a lapse of concentration."

25 November 2012
Lisbon's Blood Vessels ~ Urban Maps Experiment
Copenhagenize spots Pedro Miguel Cruz's urban mapping experiment Lisbon's Blood Vessels...
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