Painted bike lanes are great for Nimbys, they can always point at them and say "See? Nobody actually wants to bike here." Meanwhile I, and many of my neighbors would love to commute exclusively on bicycle if it weren't so dangerous and poorly designed.
Also as a cyclist, I often avoid these bike lanes because they are full of rubbish, large drain holes, water etc. then I get cars honking at me because I’m not in the bike lane despite it being for more dangerous than the road
What's sad is that the designers of the bike lanes know they're shit but they're forced to build them to appease the budget allocation, biking in The USA literally looks like a death sentence, no wonder nobody does it. Every bike lane should be clearly marked, colour coded and separated from the road via a barrier, preferably a tree line but even then it's so noisy on American roads which would be a deterrent but I suppose this solves itself with the adoption of bikes, public transport, EV's and perhaps hydrogen powered vehicles. In every video of someone biking in The USA you see illegally parked vehicles in the bike lane, drivers acting like it's not even there, the bike lane passing through a junction, etc. All of these problems are solved if you separate it from the main road.
Painted bike lanes are not bike infrastructure, they're car infrastructure. They offer no protection for cyclists. Their entire purpose is to get bikes out of the way so cars can drive faster and more dangerously.
Lol I live in the midwest US and most of the roads I'm riding on are country roads where people drive 60+mph(100+kmh) no bike lanes, or even painted stripes in the middle or anything. Also not many cars, but I still never ride without a mirror
I cycle that path you took in Surrey 4 days a week to get to work--I can confirm that I've almost died several times. The cycling path on Fraser highway between 148th and 156th is just unforgivably bad.
Also, cycling infrastructure isn't the "million dollar question" it's actually cheap, really cheap. Cars are the million dollar (but generally billion dollar) answer. You could build bike infrastructure across the entire lower mainland (and a good chuck of bc) for the cost of the port mann bridge. The skytrain across the same area as the port mann which carries a similar number of people cost about $64.2 million in 2023 dollars, port mann cost $1058 million in 2023 dollars (doesn't include the upgrades to the highway either side of the bridge). That's 16x more.
Repairs for car roads are more expensive cause cars destroy the roads more. Also, the expense of the more car accidents. Watch Not Just Bikes on how more expensive and subsided highways and suburbs are. Not Just Bikes has a video on how Japanese trains move millions of people per day.
After doing more research, trust me humanity is doomed. We are headed for probably mass death in about 50-100 years so trust me this is the least of our worries. Humans are just stupid, selfish creatures. Our best hope right now is to minimize the damage humans will cause and to try and protect as many species as we can so that after the carnage the Earth can maybe heal. I don't think humans will go fully extinct but we are probably about to go through some DARK times.
In my neighbourhood, they've swapped the order of the bike lane & parking lane on a couple of streets (so from the outside to the middle it's sidewalk => bike lane => parked cars => then car traffic lanes). It's made a real positive impact on how safe & comfortable it is to bike & walk down those streets. I hope this catches on.
This is happening in some areas of Toronto but only in some areas. Maybe in suburbs they could swap the position of grassed boulevards with the scary painted bike lanes. I know it would be expensive to retrofit, but if it were done in new developments at least.
@@not_old_yet Given how little sidewalks are used why not just join the sidewalk, grass strip, and the gutter lane into one proper width mixed use path.
@@leathandris6734 That would be ideal. On the really wide roads with wide boulevards, it would be nice to retain a strip of green, maybe with trees. Beside the multi-use (What a lovely dream!) ☺️
Petitioning FutureProof to make a video about how fixedgear bikes and the ultimate future-proof vehicle with how simple they are and how good they are for your longevity and health. Even if the world ends, bikes would still be king.
In the extremely suburban Lakewood Ranch development in Florida there are some very good multi-use paths that are separated from traffic. Unfortunately the network doesn’t nearly cover the whole area.
I recently moved from Tampa to Winter Haven. While Tampa isn't great for bikes, Winter Haven is actively hostile. We don't even get painted bike gutters, and city ordinances prohibit riding on sidewalks in "business districts" (meaning anywhere more than 50% of the street frontage is devoted to business).
@@lizzehWatch Shifter on how to prevent bike theft. One is putting bike racks in visible areas. I think Japanology had a video on biking with a giant underground bike locker. It's good if work places had bike lockers. Criminals make plans on people based on observing people's daily consistent schedules. There needs to be good train or bus infrastructure so people aren't left stranded if their bike is stolen. CityNerd said he biked to Walmart and they wouldn't let him in cause he had a backpack. They told him to put it in his car which he didn't have. We need to stop discrimination against nondrivers too. I prefer walkability so I and poor people don't have to deal with bike theft or train fees or schedules.
Buy a chain lock. Always secure your bike on a pole or tree or the bike rack. Chain through the frame. Around the object, then chain through the front wheel and then connect the lock. Regards from a real Dutch.
Now if only Ken Sim would stop trying to delete our cycling infrastructure in Vancouver. Not everyone has a meeting room that they can stick a peloton in. 😂
@@420greatestqueen Most people don't realize that their local mayor and city council have more effect on their daily lives than who's PM and running the country at the federal level. Unfortunately, local politics don't get enough attention. I'm hoping Sim gets booted from office in the next election! So far his term as mayor has been a disaster, but incumbents have a big advantage so there needs to be a strong candidate and a well-organized team to oppose him.
I live in a suburb and I can either walk 15 minutes to my closest grocery store or ride my bike less than 2 minutes. I wish I could cycle more but there aren’t any bike lanes
good for you... My wife and I go to the grocery store once a week. We get 3-4 bags of grociers and 1-2 gallons of milk. Can't put that on a bike. I'm 6'-4" 230lbs, and bench 250lbs. No way I'm carrying 3-4 bags of grociers and 1-2 gallons of milk 5,10,15 blocks. The great thing is, I DON'T HAVE TO! I have a car for that. It's wonderful. You should really try it. The freedom a car gives you is truly amazing. Can't recomend it enough...
Great video! A few years ago I talked to an American who had absolutely no hope about any changes in US infrastructure and basically gave up. And yet here we are, people are hard at work trying to make a difference. I'm cheering you all on from the Netherlands. Even though it will take a very long time (as it did in the Netherlands, it took decades of hard work from the engineers to get where we are now), keep it up and eventually may your hard work pay off. I really enjoyed the vid too :)
I'm fortunate enough to live a few blocks outside of Mueller in East Austin. The bike lanes are wonderful not only because they're SAFE, but because they're USEFUL. I can use them to get groceries, see a movie, have dinner and drinks with friends, get a haircut, or stop at Mueller park for a jog. Coming from a North Austin suburb (where I still tried to bike to the nearest grocery store whenever I could) it was a night-and-day difference in how it felt to cycle. It's not perfect (the bike lanes don't extend beyond Mueller and the neighborhood is surrounded by nasty stroads), but I can see the potential for something really special if/when other connecting infrastructure is built.
fellow Austin urban cyclist here (also originally from North Austin/Cedar Park, moved to Central Austin). I love that neighborhood and I love its bike lanes. it really is quite unfortunate how it's a little bit of a bubble, whenever I want to go to the area I have to cross I35 via 51st and it's just never pleasant.
@@Sporcle1 ugh I hate that crossing. Drivers get so unpredictable at the roundabout. It's further south on i35, but I've heard good things about crossing at the rock shop near Wilshire Blvd. The neighborhood streets that connect from there to Mueller are comfortable to ride.
@@scruf153 No doubt, it's nice to have anything at all. But the nature of infrastructure networks means they get exponentially better the more they connect, so it's good to push for more!
Saanich also has concrete barriers separating traffic from bike lane along Tillicum, Mackenzie (which are connected by the Goose / Lochside) and are working on more advanced separation along Shelbourne at the moment. What I especially like about the design of these corridors is that not only are they direct routes but they avoid hills! Mackenzie is the gentlest route to UVic, but coming from downtown, you either had to take a long route via the Goose/Lochside or ride up some hills / weave through a neighbourhood of slower streets with a lot of on-street parking - and still have to hit a big climb or two. The separated lanes being built on Shelbourne will be a game-changer because it's flat all the way and will connect with Mackenzie.
@@titosrevenger City of Victoria is really good and keeps getting better. Saanich is not bad and is getting better too. Unfortunately Oak Bay is still stuck in the 1950’s.
The majority of the Capital Regional District is pretty pro-bike. One of the reasons I moved there from Edmonton, but in its defence, Edmonton is also very pro-bike, and has the longest continually running bike coop in North America, I believe. I think it started in the mid 80s
As a subscriber and Fleetwood (Surrey) local who, just this year, began biking for my commute; I must say this video is quite the surprise! Delightful to watch, and factually sound all the way through! You cleanly covered the 3 main positive points I wanted to say about cycling in Surrey, so I feel I should expand upon 2 of them (for the benefit of the viewer): 1) Hub Cycling is not merely a good educational resource, they're also a fantastic advocacy group! I recommend donating to them if you live anywhere in Metro Vancouver and want to see more cycling infrastructure in your area. 2) Surrey Central has indeed quickly become a great place to bike around, but it's also poised to be a major hub of public and active transit in the future! It currently connects several of the bus lines in Surrey to the (soon to be expanding) Skytrain network, and has multiple new high rises being built right now. (It's still in need of a good bike shop tho) The positive growth we're seeing in Surrey (and North America as a whole) is thanks in no small part to channels like this; who are able to articulate the facts regarding transportation and infrastructure in such a way that everyday people feel compelled to speak up for positive change in their cities. So thank you, for all the hard work and quality videos!
Besides the current infrastructure, I expect the other great hurdle Surrey needs to overcome to improve cycling is the open swaths of farmland flanked by steep hills along the Serpentine River. Despite being a very oft-used stretch to drive over (thanks to businesses in Langley), and having protected bike lanes, the geography keeps it unfriendly to cyclists. I expect the growing popularity of capable e-bikes will help this somewhat, but what I'm most looking forward to is the forthcoming skytrain development which will span right across!
I enjoyed your real world cycling test in this one, and learning about Saanich! It’s great to see more protected bike lanes being built and planned, but I feel that the success of Saanich shows how those kind of separated greenways can be better catalysts for getting people on bikes than cyclelanes next to noisy roads. It’s just such a better overall experience.
One thing I'd add whenever possible is separating the bike lanes with trees. Not only we need more trees and all, but the shade provided helps so much in those summer months. Riding from Vancouver to Porty Moody and the worst heat getting to Port Moody was from the asphalt, not the sun. Also yes, separated bike lanes please... Riding on the shoulders on Bernet Hgw with cars flying by at 80~100kmh feels awful, but gets much better as you approach downtown with slower traffic and way more bike lanes in good conditions.
I live in Scarborough and bike through the intersection you showed every time I go to work. The small chunk visible in the photo (and a much longer stretch perpendicular to it) are going to be upgraded to separated bike lanes within the next year or so. I attended a public consultation for it just a couple weeks in a building visible in the photo!
I found watching this video shocking and really surprising! I live in the UK and cycle around my city all of the time. It’s super normal to cycle around the suburbs here and we have some bike lanes but our cycling infrastructure is no way as good as places like the Netherlands. I’m excited and hopeful that you guys in North America can get more into cycling as it can improve the quality of life tenfold. I love that I get to be outside, exercising, I love the adrenaline of cycling. And it helps me get faster to places, especially as driving and trying to park can be quite inconvenient where I live.
With e-bikes volume is increasing in my rural suburbanized college town. Hills were a major factor. But, biking to parks, do errands, or work means you have to reconnoiter because the necessary bike infrastructure like safe riding lanes, bike racks, etc., might not be available.
Yep. A recent study here in Germany found that the "short bike ride" for an e-bike is up to 15 km, in some cases even 30. So "to far to bike to the grocery store" doesn't exist any more - only bike-unfriendly roads.
The repurposing of the train line into Galloping goose trail is such a massive win for cycling infrastructure. That trail has become a cycling destination for tourists, a daily commuter route and a casual bike ride for locals. I know many people have visited the cities along the route judt because of that path. Wish we could see more of that foresight in other cities. Build the infrastructure and the cyclists will come!
The Goose connecting to Lochside is also amazing in that you can get from downtown to Sidney by bike and it's flat the whole way... nice to have a defunct rail line, which not every city has, but good for them to make use of it and the old E&N line for this purpose. Some places do leave in defunct rail infrastructure.
While I'm all for safe cycling routes, you could argue it a lack of foresight to not plan for reinstated rail lines on the old right-of-ways, and it certainly was a lack of foresight to abandon them in the first place. Safe and connected cycling is great but it's even better when it can connect to high quality rail transit
Glad you enjoyed my neighbourhood! Saanich, while it has a ways to go, is going to be a great place for cycling in the future. We just need to start reducing the 4 lane stroads cutting through the areas where dense housing will be in 25 years, and putting in AAA cycling infrastructure.
Wonderful information! The suburbs is exactly where bikes thrive the most, cities as you pointed out can be nicer walking and using the bus due to how cramped it can be.
Your attention to detail is top notch. Not sure how many got the “Full House” font but I did! Your videos are so good! I miss the Halifax ones. Love the bit of ukulele in the staircase episode, it was appreciated. I met you years ago at The Big Sing. signed a big fan, Sylvia from Truro
Very happy to see a new video! I agree with the survey results that not having the skill and knowledge and the safety issues being a deterrent to ride a bike as an alternative for some trips. Painted bike lanes are not enough, I would want either a large division between the bike lane and cars or a completely separate bike lane. Especially if it's surrounded by trees.
Great video! I live in Langley and it's nice to see more separated cycling lanes popping up. 216th street in Walnut Grove is about to get separated bike lanes. I hope more people start using them. Our main east/west artery in the neighborhood (88th avenue) doesn't even have a painted bike lane.
In Surrey, I used to bike everywhere. I didn't have a car, and I was biking anywhere from 120-200km a week, (lots was on Fraser highway that you rode in this video). One day I was riding to lunch, and I got hit by cars twice, then on the way home a flat tire about 12km away from home... Now flat tires are a common occurrence in Surrey, but getting hit by cars twice in one trip was really the deal breaker. I bought a car and just drive everywhere now, it was really eye opening that I was not safe and that the risk I was taking was much greater than I had remembered... We still bike for recreation but just on trails or completely separated/protected bike lanes... It sucks but I'm not going to ride if I'm literally risking my life just trying to get into the office
Indeed, the very quietness and spaciousness of the suburbs make them fundamentally much better for cycling than city centers. Not for walking, but for cycling. Sweden is OK but not amazing at urban and inter-urban bike infrastructure, but our suburbs and suburban towns are ALWAYS absolutely packed with greenway (away-from-street) bike paths. After years of hating the boring swedish suburbia I have really come to appreciate this aspect of them.
Great video Uytae, all city councils need to see this. You've covered the largest of the issues preventing more cycling to get to nearby destinations, well done. I think one of the next most significant of the issues is theft. The majority of destinations provide no way for visitors to lock their bikes and if they do, it's often inadequate and just an afterthought (South Surrey Home Depot, I'm looking at you...). The city and businesses can help by providing decent bike lockup options - I love what they've done in some parts of West Van as an example.
Minor correction, the trail North of Uptown is Lochside until you get to the fork at switch bridge. From there the other directions (south and west) are the Galloping Goose.
This definitely feels like it could be describing my suburb. A decent amount of cycling infrastructure, but absolutely no cycling NETWORK. A bunch of MUPs that don't connect to each other. Then a bunch of unprotected bike lanes that disappear at every. single. signaled. intersection. Precisely one road with an actual separated bike lane on one short stretch, and a parallel MUP for one other shorter stretch (at the opposite end of the road). It's cycling infrastructure for short and extremely local recreational cycling, not for actually getting anywhere. It's under a 5 minute bike ride to my nearest grocery store, but not a remotely safe one....
Thanks for this video. I can relate to it a lot. I live in Melbourne Australia, and I ride an electric scooter (not a bike, sorry) and I greatly enjoy it. But the biggest issue is the lack of dedicated paths. We add lanes & lanes & more lanes to our freeways and devote very little time and money to our paths. Also, I love that thing about the 'Bike Bus' that is very cool!
Awesome Uytae! My wife will start her biking commute to her new job in Halifax from the Dartmouth suburbs next week so... wish her luck. Great music choices btw :)
If we’re being technical, Utyae, the trail from Mackenzie to Uptown that you took is actually the Lochside Regional Trail, which meets up with the Galloping Goose Trail at Uptown, which was your destination. But the point is valid that these regional trails make cycling a much more pleasurable experience in Saanich than in Surrey!
lovely video. In your section about why we should accomodate biking, don't forget all the people without driver's licenses need to get around too! (kids, seniors, disabled, intoxicated, etc...)
Thanks for another great video, Uytae. This is such an important topic. In an effort to use my car less, I am shopping for an electric bike to get my aging body up the local hills. I agree that protected bike lanes need to be the norm if we ever expect families to ride bikes. The Galloping Goose bike trail is a fabulous experience and I wish that we had the equivalent here in Surrey. I think it would be an interesting topic for a video to explore the growing impact of electric bicycles on transportation as they can flatten the hills and enable seniors like myself to continue cycling.
You crammed a ton of info into a video that’s under fifteen minutes! Great job! You are right that not bicycling in the suburbs is a choice, not a necessity and choosing to has so many advantages. Stuff we don’t think of that makes a big difference is a cycling neighbourhood tends to have a lot more trees and plants, which smells a lot nicer and is more cheering. Suburb is a funny word, when an entire city is the suburb. That may change over time. We need to make the built up areas a lot better to the point people want them over fully detached. That will take a lot of thinking. The easy part is... be sure to include bikes!
London, there have been 3 tests to see which mode of transit was the fastest. Every time bike came out fastest and car slowest, while metro and buses flipping between each other.
First time watching one of your vids. As a lifelong Fraser Valley resident, seeing you brave Fraser Hwy on a bike is more than enough to earn a sub from me.
When you do the drone shot over the old railway bike path and you show that they didn't bother connecting it to all of the amenities around when it's literally right there, a few meters away...
Gradual replacement of trips is so crucial. I moved to a city that had bike infrastructure. It took me six years of gradually replacing everything with walking, cycling, and transit. The last two years my car sat in my paid parking spot, because I was still worried I might need the car for safety. When I sold that car, I didn't want to have to turn around and buy another. I wanted to sell it and know I was okay without it. Great video.
The short answer is no!! Great video. To highlight Houten in the Netherlands. I spent some time there recently. What a fascinating place. Perhaps an actual 15 minute city.
Another fantastic video! The contrast between what safe, accessible infrastructure is like vs. when cities just slap some paint down on people-hostile streets is so clear. I hope Surrey can the regional lead on this and make some big moves here, especially since City of Vancouver/ABC seems to be intent on actually moving backwards.
The absence of biking infrastructure is especially painful considering just HOW MUCH WASTED SPACE THERE IS! You could easily, EASILY have dedicated bike paths criss-crossing the suburbs but NIMBYs are just too stuck up to see any resemblance of change…
Great video! Some sweet drone shots here. I love cycling around Vancouver, but when you hit those lane with just the painted line...yeah, it feels like a miracle you make it out unscathed.
I just wanted to share my experience as someone living in the Blue Mountain area of Coquitlam. Suburbs can vary a lot, and for me, the main artery connecting me to the downtown core and my workplace without crazy detours and added elevation is the Lougheed Highway. Unfortunately, cycling on Lougheed Highway is truly terrifying due to the lack of proper cycling infrastructure. It would be fantastic if there were improvements to make it safer for cyclists.
Great video. So many videos are about how we need to densify to make cycling more attractive. Sure, it's still not great for walking but this video was a great argument for suburbs being find for riding.
As someone who commutes to work in the suburbs all it would take for the suburbs to be more viable is for businesses to bring back their bike racks. I'd prefer other things as well, but bare minimum I need a place to keep my bike. It would be nice if some of the larger stores had secure bike lockups. It would be nice if there were more bike lanes. Separation from car traffic would be optimal. But bare minimum if I go somewhere I need to put my bike somewhere and currently I only know of one grocery store that has a small bike rack, it's out of the way and kind of sketchy and I don't want to use it. Bring bike racks inside where staff can easily see if there's someone with an angle grinder. I do want to say one thing though, those places shown as not great for cycling, with painted bike lanes that shares with cars...it's really not that bad. The editing makes it seem chaotic and scary but I honestly don't feel unsafe at all. I was really worried after I decided to start cycling to work but once I actually got going it was fine. The places I do feel unsafe are large roads without a bike lane, but I avoid those. So I want to encourage people who are considering cycling to work, or anywhere, to do it. It's likely scarier in your head than in reality. Pick a route you think works best and do a test run.
We here in the Netherlands also do not have separated bike lanes everywhere. Also many "bike suggestion lanes" are mostly made. These are red painted lanes with white non-continuing lines next to them. We are used to them and it works okay. In the narrow streets where I come from there are no bike lanes. But where possible, separated bike lanes are made. Here a street view link. You can go through the streets. Take a look maps.app.goo.gl/zBP1phRQBdS4fMFg8?g_st=ac At the other side of the water you see a 4-lane 70 kmh road west of the city and it has separated bike lanes.
Such a timely video! With families feeling the crunch of the rental housing market for 3 bd apartments within the city, this offers hope that with a little research, one can still find a neighborhood that finds that balance with a cargo e-bike. I imagine an e-bike would have helped your ride even more so glad you used an "acoustic" for an easier, more accessible option to getting started.
In schools we teach students valuable life skills like reading, writing, math, exercise, etc. It would be cool to see Bicycle Education incorporated into the curriculum too!
It's better than a concept for a while. Here's a program called safety town in the USA. I volunteered one year for it when I was in highschool. But yes, Street knowledge is not knowledge. That's sacred to driver's education. I would. I argue that we don't do enough Street/drivers in children's education.
Here in Fayetteville, Arkansas, they LOVE the little paint line next to the gutter. The bike lane on the highway in this video is twice as wide as my city's bike lanes. We have some dedicated multi-use trails, but all but 1 aren't well-connected to amenities, and few are connected together.
Ironically, when i lived in saanich, i gave up on biking, because the route to UVIC was pretty bad. But they've done so much in the last 6 years or so. I had a friend who rode the galloping goose from saanich to esquimalt, across the inlet, and i was jealous. Now i ride to work sometimes, but crossing the alex Fraser bridge isn't all that stress free.
The Goose is such an awesome path. Especially connecting to Lochside. Biking to the ferry has never been easier. If only the Lower Mainland would put cycling infrastructure on their side
So, first of all, I really appreciate this video. I'm a big fan of the hypothesis that protected/separated bike lanes can re-establish norms and help would-be cyclists feel safe. Having regularly cycled in Saanich many times, both on "the Goose" (as we call it) and on roads that currently lack separated bike lanes (but are about to get them), like Shelbourne, I can absolutely say that separated bike lanes are a nice option when available. I can also say that I don't always use them and I sometimes dislike them (e.g. when I need to make a turn but the bike lane restricts me from moving into a car lane that I need to use to turn left. Which is a distasteful but unavoidable necessity, sometimes). I'm an academic economist at UVic, so here are a few 'economist comments' (they sound like criticisms to everyone who's not an economist, but they're sincere comments) on the content: 1) Is there an associated paper with this study? If so, I'd like to read it. Hopefully it already addresses the next couple comments. If not, I think it's important to consider these things when trying to properly ascertain the impact of things like separated bike lanes on cycling uptake. 2) While Saanich does have and is further developing good cycling infrastructure, I'm still highly suspicious that Saanich's high rate of cycling is largely due to the interaction of UVic being in Saanich and the fact that the Greater Victoria area (of which Saanich is the largest city) is the most temperate climate in Canada. Also, it's reasonably flat. Surrey does have an SFU campus that should make things somewhat comparable, but a proper statistical analysis of things would account for e.g. the proportion of rainy days and the proportion of the population that regularly attends a higher ed. institution. 3) I spent 5 years living in Davis, California to do my PhD at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis). Davis is often referred to (for various reasons. Some might contest the claim) as "the Bike Capital of North America". I can attest to the fact that the per capita number of bike trips was truly massive. Yet, to my point (2), Davis has fantastic year-round weather for cycling (February could sometimes bring a few days of rain, but those were rare). It's also incredibly flat. Finally, and probably most importantly, the city essentially exists to support UC Davis, which enrolls or employs the vast majority of residents. Keeping all of this in mind, the relevant thing to note is that the cycling infrastructure is largely painted lanes. This fact was often lamented by residents I met (e.g. my barber). Furthermore, the norms in Davis were just different than in pretty much every other city I've been in: cyclists were so prominent that drivers would regularly stop in the middle of four-way stop intersections to let cyclists cross in front of them regardless of who arrived first. This was a necessity, because cyclists were so comfortable in Davis that they often paid zero attention to cars and road signs, and often even were staring at their phones while cycling, because the norms just made things so safe for them that they could effectively do whatever they wanted. Taking all this together, Davis stands as a counterpoint to the claims made in this video. So... I'm cautiously optimistic about the claims made in the video. But I need to see a sound econometric (statistical) analysis that considers these sorts of covariates before I confidently embrace the conclusions. I need to see a better identification strategy than simply Surrey vs. Saanich alongside summary statistics. If you want to take this analysis to the next stage, feel free to get in touch with me (wiltshire(at)uvic(dot)ca).
You guys have the important stuff covered, I'm just here to point out how gorgeous that lugged, steel-frame road bike is. Uytae is clearly a man of culture.
i live in a small town in north italy(5k of population), we have great bike infrastructure for a small town approximately 13 bike path/lane, 3 of these are connected to other town. i actually prefer bike in small town compared to cities, cuz they have better infrastructure. (at least here where i live)
i feel like ive watched a lot of urban transportation videos but this is def one of the best ones ive seen. nice work! I've lived in areas both like Surrey and Saanich. I'm a pretty brave/risky bike rider so I'm comfortable with painted bike lanes but I've found that convincing the majority of people to ride even next to slow moving traffic is difficult. Over the past couple of years my mindset about how to get better cycling infrastructure has changed significantly. I used to think that having more riders and demand will force cities to build good infrastructure but that's just clearly unreasonable (just as you've described). Even for myself, I got a car and realized how much my mental health and motivations to run errands actually got better because I wasn't always in a high stress mode on the road (extremely ironic I know as car accidents are so common and distracted drivers are the worst). I try so hard to not be doomer about this reality and sometimes watching these types of videos makes me more doomer. But you've done a great job of highlighting ways to promote real change (bike education programs, group rides, and community building) that reassures me that I'm doing the right thing for the world I want to see. I really encourage people to look for and volunteer for local groups doing the work at a grassroots level - searching on social media specifically instagram has worked best for me
As someone who used to commute to City Centre by bike from South Surrey, I can say there are great bike lanes in Surrey. There's a BC Hydro right of way near 128th Street and others that run west to east from City Centre to Langley. The problem from what I experienced is quick, safe, and easy access to these routes. Way finding, protected lanes, lighting and more routes connecting North to South Surrey would be very helpful.
You also need bike racks where one can lock the FRAME of the bike to a secure structure at the destination. Most bike racks only allow one to lock one of the tires, making it extremely easy to steal a bike.
I live in the area you biked! I totally agree, Surrey infrastructure isn't orientated for anyone, but with the skytrain extension coming hopefully new bike and walking routes can be added.
I’m a cyclist who works in Saanich (and lives less than 100m from the border of Saanich). Cycling really is the best method of commute for me. Driving a car would mean that I’d have to go around the massive Cedar Hill Golf Course, which has several busy intersections around its corners, whereas a bike path lets me cut through it and saves me probably 25% of the time. Taking the bus is far worse because the only routes require me to walk to the end of the block and take two buses that ultimately make a V shape, taking around 30 minutes, when I can get to my work in 12 minutes by bike. I have to cross some busy streets, but there are designated crossings. There are some cracks in this perfect cycling utopia, though, and most of them are centred around Shelbourne Street, a main thoroughfare that is currently closed for construction. That’s led to people taking residential roads as detours, which has made some roads that are usually safe to bike on seem a lot more treacherous. There are also some places where the bike lane just inexplicably ends, such as patches on Cedar Hill Road (one of the roads that people are using instead of Shelbourne). But overall, I can’t complain. It really is easy to get by by bike in this city. Thanks for the video!
in addition to safe bike infrastucture meaning seperated bike lanes not painted bike gutter - it's also great to add safe/secure bike parking at destinations to the conversation. I'm always nervous about biking somewhere when I don't know if I'm going to have a good visable place to lock up my bike.
What you point out in the video is something I've often found to be true in the suburbs: cycling is possible, but whenever you hit a stroad (which is often), things get tense because it's usually just you and a painted bike lane (or nothing at all) and drivers get quite close without really caring. Some even have this weird animosity toward bikers (I'm looking at you, massive pickup truck dude who never hauls anything) and will actively try to mess with you.
One thing that unites many suburbs is very wide streets, which makes adding wide, well protected bike lanes a lot easier than in denser cities with older narrow streets. I believe in great cycling infrastructure everywhere (and I think we should sacrifice parking in city cores to get it) but the argument could easily be made that the suburbs are the best place to start.
I usually don't take my bicycle inside the big city. Suburbs and small villages are great to get around with the bicycle. So you don't need the car for local traffic that is beyond walking distance. And of course, riding your bicycle in nature is the most fun.
Painted bike lanes are great for Nimbys, they can always point at them and say "See? Nobody actually wants to bike here." Meanwhile I, and many of my neighbors would love to commute exclusively on bicycle if it weren't so dangerous and poorly designed.
Paint only bike lanes should be banned and only protected or fully separated bike lanes allowed
Also as a cyclist, I often avoid these bike lanes because they are full of rubbish, large drain holes, water etc. then I get cars honking at me because I’m not in the bike lane despite it being for more dangerous than the road
@@JHA854unfortunately this is also the case with separated bike lanes when they're underfunded
What's sad is that the designers of the bike lanes know they're shit but they're forced to build them to appease the budget allocation, biking in The USA literally looks like a death sentence, no wonder nobody does it. Every bike lane should be clearly marked, colour coded and separated from the road via a barrier, preferably a tree line but even then it's so noisy on American roads which would be a deterrent but I suppose this solves itself with the adoption of bikes, public transport, EV's and perhaps hydrogen powered vehicles.
In every video of someone biking in The USA you see illegally parked vehicles in the bike lane, drivers acting like it's not even there, the bike lane passing through a junction, etc. All of these problems are solved if you separate it from the main road.
Painted bike lanes are not bike infrastructure, they're car infrastructure. They offer no protection for cyclists. Their entire purpose is to get bikes out of the way so cars can drive faster and more dangerously.
Uytae out here taking his life in his hands cycling Fraser Highway to deliver premium About Here content
Can't believe I used to ride this regularily as a teenager. Uytae rode some of the same chunks that I used to commute on.
My immediate thought when he said he'd be biking in Surrey: "No! He's too precious!"
It’s the type of stroad I ride on to work 😭😭
Fr who needs horror films when you can just watch someone bike along that tiny little lane with SUVs and buses going by 😭
it's nuts hey?
Ottawa loves painted bike lanes on streets with 80km/h speed limits. Terrifying experience.
Like the South Fraser Perimeter highway here in Surrey/Delta. Terrifying as the average person is actually driving 110+ km/h.
I thought bike riders enjoy it.
@@ninjanerdstudent6937 Some of us don't have death wishes and just want to get around while exercising.
@@fernbedek6302 I see. Please tell me more.
Lol I live in the midwest US and most of the roads I'm riding on are country roads where people drive 60+mph(100+kmh) no bike lanes, or even painted stripes in the middle or anything. Also not many cars, but I still never ride without a mirror
I always appreciate the optimistic tone of these videos. That positive energy goes a long way when you're living in North American suburbia.
I cycle that path you took in Surrey 4 days a week to get to work--I can confirm that I've almost died several times. The cycling path on Fraser highway between 148th and 156th is just unforgivably bad.
😟
Also, cycling infrastructure isn't the "million dollar question" it's actually cheap, really cheap. Cars are the million dollar (but generally billion dollar) answer.
You could build bike infrastructure across the entire lower mainland (and a good chuck of bc) for the cost of the port mann bridge.
The skytrain across the same area as the port mann which carries a similar number of people cost about $64.2 million in 2023 dollars, port mann cost $1058 million in 2023 dollars (doesn't include the upgrades to the highway either side of the bridge).
That's 16x more.
Repairs for car roads are more expensive cause cars destroy the roads more.
Also, the expense of the more car accidents.
Watch Not Just Bikes on how more expensive and subsided highways and suburbs are.
Not Just Bikes has a video on how Japanese trains move millions of people per day.
Mayor of Copenhagen: "we built a lot of bike infrastructure after WWII because we couldn't afford car infrastructure."
After doing more research, trust me humanity is doomed. We are headed for probably mass death in about 50-100 years so trust me this is the least of our worries. Humans are just stupid, selfish creatures.
Our best hope right now is to minimize the damage humans will cause and to try and protect as many species as we can so that after the carnage the Earth can maybe heal. I don't think humans will go fully extinct but we are probably about to go through some DARK times.
In my neighbourhood, they've swapped the order of the bike lane & parking lane on a couple of streets (so from the outside to the middle it's sidewalk => bike lane => parked cars => then car traffic lanes). It's made a real positive impact on how safe & comfortable it is to bike & walk down those streets. I hope this catches on.
This is happening in some areas of Toronto but only in some areas. Maybe in suburbs they could swap the position of grassed boulevards with the scary painted bike lanes. I know it would be expensive to retrofit, but if it were done in new developments at least.
@@not_old_yet Given how little sidewalks are used why not just join the sidewalk, grass strip, and the gutter lane into one proper width mixed use path.
@@leathandris6734 That would be ideal. On the really wide roads with wide boulevards, it would be nice to retain a strip of green, maybe with trees. Beside the multi-use (What a lovely dream!) ☺️
@@leathandris6734 I hate mixed use paths. Pedestrians are much slower and less directionally stable than bikes.
That's how most of the protected bike lanes are designed in NYC.
babe wake up a new About Here video just dropped 🥳
Levi! Come to Canadian Civil Alive!
Petitioning FutureProof to make a video about how fixedgear bikes and the ultimate future-proof vehicle with how simple they are and how good they are for your longevity and health. Even if the world ends, bikes would still be king.
Overused comment
@@YungStinkyWinky "Even if the world ends"
Where would you get new tires?
It’ll be great to see the new dedicated cycle route along Fraser Hwy in a few years once the Surrey Langley SkyTrain opens
The Surrey painted bike line highway experience= the entire southern United States, especially Florida
As a born and raised Floridian, I would only ride on sidewalks or bike paths. I'm not sharing any road with the local drivers.
In the extremely suburban Lakewood Ranch development in Florida there are some very good multi-use paths that are separated from traffic. Unfortunately the network doesn’t nearly cover the whole area.
as a former floridian moved to NC, i miss florida bike lanes
I recently moved from Tampa to Winter Haven. While Tampa isn't great for bikes, Winter Haven is actively hostile. We don't even get painted bike gutters, and city ordinances prohibit riding on sidewalks in "business districts" (meaning anywhere more than 50% of the street frontage is devoted to business).
You've got a bike lane?! Lucky bastard
As a resident of Surrey, the first time I biked to a mall for a quick errand, the bike was stolen within 15 minutes in front of the main entrance 😂
This is EXACTLY what I'm talking about! Getting people safely to their destinations is only half of the problem!
@@lizzehWatch Shifter on how to prevent bike theft.
One is putting bike racks in visible areas.
I think Japanology had a video on biking with a giant underground bike locker.
It's good if work places had bike lockers.
Criminals make plans on people based on observing people's daily consistent schedules.
There needs to be good train or bus infrastructure so people aren't left stranded if their bike is stolen.
CityNerd said he biked to Walmart and they wouldn't let him in cause he had a backpack. They told him to put it in his car which he didn't have.
We need to stop discrimination against nondrivers too.
I prefer walkability so I and poor people don't have to deal with bike theft or train fees or schedules.
@@user-gu9yq5sj7c Another option is folding bikes that you can bring with you.
Buy a chain lock. Always secure your bike on a pole or tree or the bike rack. Chain through the frame. Around the object, then chain through the front wheel and then connect the lock. Regards from a real Dutch.
Now if only Ken Sim would stop trying to delete our cycling infrastructure in Vancouver. Not everyone has a meeting room that they can stick a peloton in. 😂
We need to vote him out. Unfortunately the voting rate at local elections is very low
@@420greatestqueen I mean, he still bleeds
Kens Sims audacity to turn a boardroom into a private dojo almost seems like it could be in an episode of parks and recreation.
@@420greatestqueen Most people don't realize that their local mayor and city council have more effect on their daily lives than who's PM and running the country at the federal level. Unfortunately, local politics don't get enough attention. I'm hoping Sim gets booted from office in the next election! So far his term as mayor has been a disaster, but incumbents have a big advantage so there needs to be a strong candidate and a well-organized team to oppose him.
Can we just make Uytae the mayor already
I live in a suburb and I can either walk 15 minutes to my closest grocery store or ride my bike less than 2 minutes. I wish I could cycle more but there aren’t any bike lanes
Heyyy just like me! ... And countless thousands of others.
My closest grocery store is about a 30 minute walk or a 10 minute bike ride with moderate hills
good for you... My wife and I go to the grocery store once a week. We get 3-4 bags of grociers and 1-2 gallons of milk. Can't put that on a bike. I'm 6'-4" 230lbs, and bench 250lbs. No way I'm carrying 3-4 bags of grociers and 1-2 gallons of milk 5,10,15 blocks. The great thing is, I DON'T HAVE TO! I have a car for that. It's wonderful. You should really try it. The freedom a car gives you is truly amazing. Can't recomend it enough...
@@bikebudha01 You could easily fit that on a bike.
@@antonioiniguez1615 really, I have 5 bikes, and couldn't fit that on any of them...
Great video! A few years ago I talked to an American who had absolutely no hope about any changes in US infrastructure and basically gave up. And yet here we are, people are hard at work trying to make a difference. I'm cheering you all on from the Netherlands. Even though it will take a very long time (as it did in the Netherlands, it took decades of hard work from the engineers to get where we are now), keep it up and eventually may your hard work pay off. I really enjoyed the vid too :)
I'm fortunate enough to live a few blocks outside of Mueller in East Austin. The bike lanes are wonderful not only because they're SAFE, but because they're USEFUL. I can use them to get groceries, see a movie, have dinner and drinks with friends, get a haircut, or stop at Mueller park for a jog. Coming from a North Austin suburb (where I still tried to bike to the nearest grocery store whenever I could) it was a night-and-day difference in how it felt to cycle. It's not perfect (the bike lanes don't extend beyond Mueller and the neighborhood is surrounded by nasty stroads), but I can see the potential for something really special if/when other connecting infrastructure is built.
fellow Austin urban cyclist here (also originally from North Austin/Cedar Park, moved to Central Austin). I love that neighborhood and I love its bike lanes. it really is quite unfortunate how it's a little bit of a bubble, whenever I want to go to the area I have to cross I35 via 51st and it's just never pleasant.
better than my small city in Alabama most everyday places are in a 5 mile radius with no bike lanes
@@Sporcle1 ugh I hate that crossing. Drivers get so unpredictable at the roundabout. It's further south on i35, but I've heard good things about crossing at the rock shop near Wilshire Blvd. The neighborhood streets that connect from there to Mueller are comfortable to ride.
@@scruf153 No doubt, it's nice to have anything at all. But the nature of infrastructure networks means they get exponentially better the more they connect, so it's good to push for more!
Galloping Goose as a 90s kid was S-tier
That's where I learned to ride on two wheels! It's such a great bike path.
Really sucked when it wasn't paved lol
Nice and it's still S tier
Saanich also has concrete barriers separating traffic from bike lane along Tillicum, Mackenzie (which are connected by the Goose / Lochside) and are working on more advanced separation along Shelbourne at the moment. What I especially like about the design of these corridors is that not only are they direct routes but they avoid hills! Mackenzie is the gentlest route to UVic, but coming from downtown, you either had to take a long route via the Goose/Lochside or ride up some hills / weave through a neighbourhood of slower streets with a lot of on-street parking - and still have to hit a big climb or two. The separated lanes being built on Shelbourne will be a game-changer because it's flat all the way and will connect with Mackenzie.
I love the insight into Saanich! I would've never expected a place like that to have stellar cycling infrastructure
Greater Victoria is extremely bike friendly. It helps that you see bikes on the roads wherever you go.
@@titosrevenger City of Victoria is really good and keeps getting better. Saanich is not bad and is getting better too. Unfortunately Oak Bay is still stuck in the 1950’s.
The majority of the Capital Regional District is pretty pro-bike. One of the reasons I moved there from Edmonton, but in its defence, Edmonton is also very pro-bike, and has the longest continually running bike coop in North America, I believe. I think it started in the mid 80s
@@ottarobe Hey now! Oak Bay has those painted lanes on Foul Bay and Fort. :D
@@ottarobetrue!!
As a subscriber and Fleetwood (Surrey) local who, just this year, began biking for my commute; I must say this video is quite the surprise! Delightful to watch, and factually sound all the way through!
You cleanly covered the 3 main positive points I wanted to say about cycling in Surrey, so I feel I should expand upon 2 of them (for the benefit of the viewer):
1) Hub Cycling is not merely a good educational resource, they're also a fantastic advocacy group! I recommend donating to them if you live anywhere in Metro Vancouver and want to see more cycling infrastructure in your area.
2) Surrey Central has indeed quickly become a great place to bike around, but it's also poised to be a major hub of public and active transit in the future! It currently connects several of the bus lines in Surrey to the (soon to be expanding) Skytrain network, and has multiple new high rises being built right now. (It's still in need of a good bike shop tho)
The positive growth we're seeing in Surrey (and North America as a whole) is thanks in no small part to channels like this; who are able to articulate the facts regarding transportation and infrastructure in such a way that everyday people feel compelled to speak up for positive change in their cities. So thank you, for all the hard work and quality videos!
Besides the current infrastructure, I expect the other great hurdle Surrey needs to overcome to improve cycling is the open swaths of farmland flanked by steep hills along the Serpentine River. Despite being a very oft-used stretch to drive over (thanks to businesses in Langley), and having protected bike lanes, the geography keeps it unfriendly to cyclists.
I expect the growing popularity of capable e-bikes will help this somewhat, but what I'm most looking forward to is the forthcoming skytrain development which will span right across!
Uytae putting life and limb at risk to bring us more dope ass About Here videos.
I enjoyed your real world cycling test in this one, and learning about Saanich! It’s great to see more protected bike lanes being built and planned, but I feel that the success of Saanich shows how those kind of separated greenways can be better catalysts for getting people on bikes than cyclelanes next to noisy roads. It’s just such a better overall experience.
One thing I'd add whenever possible is separating the bike lanes with trees. Not only we need more trees and all, but the shade provided helps so much in those summer months. Riding from Vancouver to Porty Moody and the worst heat getting to Port Moody was from the asphalt, not the sun. Also yes, separated bike lanes please... Riding on the shoulders on Bernet Hgw with cars flying by at 80~100kmh feels awful, but gets much better as you approach downtown with slower traffic and way more bike lanes in good conditions.
I live in Scarborough and bike through the intersection you showed every time I go to work. The small chunk visible in the photo (and a much longer stretch perpendicular to it) are going to be upgraded to separated bike lanes within the next year or so. I attended a public consultation for it just a couple weeks in a building visible in the photo!
I LOVED the 90’s sitcom opening credits and theme song!
I found watching this video shocking and really surprising! I live in the UK and cycle around my city all of the time. It’s super normal to cycle around the suburbs here and we have some bike lanes but our cycling infrastructure is no way as good as places like the Netherlands. I’m excited and hopeful that you guys in North America can get more into cycling as it can improve the quality of life tenfold. I love that I get to be outside, exercising, I love the adrenaline of cycling. And it helps me get faster to places, especially as driving and trying to park can be quite inconvenient where I live.
Best channel on UA-cam
With e-bikes volume is increasing in my rural suburbanized college town. Hills were a major factor.
But, biking to parks, do errands, or work means you have to reconnoiter because the necessary bike infrastructure like safe riding lanes, bike racks, etc., might not be available.
Yep. A recent study here in Germany found that the "short bike ride" for an e-bike is up to 15 km, in some cases even 30. So "to far to bike to the grocery store" doesn't exist any more - only bike-unfriendly roads.
I am considering to get an ebike too, but I don't think city of Coquitlam/Burnaby will change soon.
This one video says everything. A great video to show stakeholders.
As someone who works in this field, you were so brave for biking alongside traffic in Surrey 😭I got scared for you
I cycle in those place everyday in Alabama
AWESOME video, as usual. A must see for all city planners and politicians.
The repurposing of the train line into Galloping goose trail is such a massive win for cycling infrastructure. That trail has become a cycling destination for tourists, a daily commuter route and a casual bike ride for locals. I know many people have visited the cities along the route judt because of that path. Wish we could see more of that foresight in other cities. Build the infrastructure and the cyclists will come!
The Goose connecting to Lochside is also amazing in that you can get from downtown to Sidney by bike and it's flat the whole way... nice to have a defunct rail line, which not every city has, but good for them to make use of it and the old E&N line for this purpose. Some places do leave in defunct rail infrastructure.
While I'm all for safe cycling routes, you could argue it a lack of foresight to not plan for reinstated rail lines on the old right-of-ways, and it certainly was a lack of foresight to abandon them in the first place. Safe and connected cycling is great but it's even better when it can connect to high quality rail transit
Glad you enjoyed my neighbourhood! Saanich, while it has a ways to go, is going to be a great place for cycling in the future. We just need to start reducing the 4 lane stroads cutting through the areas where dense housing will be in 25 years, and putting in AAA cycling infrastructure.
Wonderful information! The suburbs is exactly where bikes thrive the most, cities as you pointed out can be nicer walking and using the bus due to how cramped it can be.
Your attention to detail is top notch. Not sure how many got the “Full House” font but I did! Your videos are so good! I miss the Halifax ones. Love the bit of ukulele in the staircase episode, it was appreciated. I met you years ago at The Big Sing.
signed a big fan,
Sylvia from Truro
Very happy to see a new video!
I agree with the survey results that not having the skill and knowledge and the safety issues being a deterrent to ride a bike as an alternative for some trips. Painted bike lanes are not enough, I would want either a large division between the bike lane and cars or a completely separate bike lane. Especially if it's surrounded by trees.
Great video! I live in Langley and it's nice to see more separated cycling lanes popping up. 216th street in Walnut Grove is about to get separated bike lanes. I hope more people start using them. Our main east/west artery in the neighborhood (88th avenue) doesn't even have a painted bike lane.
In Surrey, I used to bike everywhere. I didn't have a car, and I was biking anywhere from 120-200km a week, (lots was on Fraser highway that you rode in this video). One day I was riding to lunch, and I got hit by cars twice, then on the way home a flat tire about 12km away from home... Now flat tires are a common occurrence in Surrey, but getting hit by cars twice in one trip was really the deal breaker. I bought a car and just drive everywhere now, it was really eye opening that I was not safe and that the risk I was taking was much greater than I had remembered... We still bike for recreation but just on trails or completely separated/protected bike lanes... It sucks but I'm not going to ride if I'm literally risking my life just trying to get into the office
Indeed, the very quietness and spaciousness of the suburbs make them fundamentally much better for cycling than city centers. Not for walking, but for cycling. Sweden is OK but not amazing at urban and inter-urban bike infrastructure, but our suburbs and suburban towns are ALWAYS absolutely packed with greenway (away-from-street) bike paths. After years of hating the boring swedish suburbia I have really come to appreciate this aspect of them.
Great video Uytae, all city councils need to see this.
You've covered the largest of the issues preventing more cycling to get to nearby destinations, well done.
I think one of the next most significant of the issues is theft. The majority of destinations provide no way for visitors to lock their bikes and if they do, it's often inadequate and just an afterthought (South Surrey Home Depot, I'm looking at you...). The city and businesses can help by providing decent bike lockup options - I love what they've done in some parts of West Van as an example.
Minor correction, the trail North of Uptown is Lochside until you get to the fork at switch bridge. From there the other directions (south and west) are the Galloping Goose.
Absolutely fantastic video here. Thank you.
This definitely feels like it could be describing my suburb. A decent amount of cycling infrastructure, but absolutely no cycling NETWORK.
A bunch of MUPs that don't connect to each other. Then a bunch of unprotected bike lanes that disappear at every. single. signaled. intersection. Precisely one road with an actual separated bike lane on one short stretch, and a parallel MUP for one other shorter stretch (at the opposite end of the road).
It's cycling infrastructure for short and extremely local recreational cycling, not for actually getting anywhere. It's under a 5 minute bike ride to my nearest grocery store, but not a remotely safe one....
Thanks for this video. I can relate to it a lot. I live in Melbourne Australia, and I ride an electric scooter (not a bike, sorry) and I greatly enjoy it. But the biggest issue is the lack of dedicated paths. We add lanes & lanes & more lanes to our freeways and devote very little time and money to our paths.
Also, I love that thing about the 'Bike Bus' that is very cool!
Awesome Uytae! My wife will start her biking commute to her new job in Halifax from the Dartmouth suburbs next week so... wish her luck. Great music choices btw :)
Love the bike bus idea, my daughter is only 1 but I’ll look into something like this in my neighborhood of Colorado when the time comes
Saanich mention! Instant upvote!
If we’re being technical, Utyae, the trail from Mackenzie to Uptown that you took is actually the Lochside Regional Trail, which meets up with the Galloping Goose Trail at Uptown, which was your destination. But the point is valid that these regional trails make cycling a much more pleasurable experience in Saanich than in Surrey!
lovely video. In your section about why we should accomodate biking, don't forget all the people without driver's licenses need to get around too! (kids, seniors, disabled, intoxicated, etc...)
Thanks for another great video, Uytae. This is such an important topic. In an effort to use my car less, I am shopping for an electric bike to get my aging body up the local hills. I agree that protected bike lanes need to be the norm if we ever expect families to ride bikes. The Galloping Goose bike trail is a fabulous experience and I wish that we had the equivalent here in Surrey.
I think it would be an interesting topic for a video to explore the growing impact of electric bicycles on transportation as they can flatten the hills and enable seniors like myself to continue cycling.
You crammed a ton of info into a video that’s under fifteen minutes! Great job!
You are right that not bicycling in the suburbs is a choice, not a necessity and choosing to has so many advantages. Stuff we don’t think of that makes a big difference is a cycling neighbourhood tends to have a lot more trees and plants, which smells a lot nicer and is more cheering.
Suburb is a funny word, when an entire city is the suburb. That may change over time. We need to make the built up areas a lot better to the point people want them over fully detached. That will take a lot of thinking. The easy part is... be sure to include bikes!
London, there have been 3 tests to see which mode of transit was the fastest. Every time bike came out fastest and car slowest, while metro and buses flipping between each other.
First time watching one of your vids. As a lifelong Fraser Valley resident, seeing you brave Fraser Hwy on a bike is more than enough to earn a sub from me.
This channel has become one of my favorites. Great stuff. Keep it up!
Love seeing the Saanich props. Lochside trail is also amazing.
When you do the drone shot over the old railway bike path and you show that they didn't bother connecting it to all of the amenities around when it's literally right there, a few meters away...
Gradual replacement of trips is so crucial. I moved to a city that had bike infrastructure. It took me six years of gradually replacing everything with walking, cycling, and transit. The last two years my car sat in my paid parking spot, because I was still worried I might need the car for safety. When I sold that car, I didn't want to have to turn around and buy another. I wanted to sell it and know I was okay without it. Great video.
I quite enjoy this guy's videos 👏👏 good channel 👍
I love this channel, especially now that I’ve moved to Vancouver
Its nice to see so many people eager to bike in those communities!
I wish there was a Gallopping Goose in every city!!! Another awesome informative video uytae
I've been enjoying the bike lanes around Surrey central! Great improvements
The short answer is no!!
Great video. To highlight Houten in the Netherlands. I spent some time there recently. What a fascinating place. Perhaps an actual 15 minute city.
what a gorgeous bike frame you have
Omg the fear in your eyes in that Surrey ride. Stay safe~ great video btw. Always learning about my home town.
Thank you for the optimism
Another banger, keep up the good work.
Amazing video, thank you!
Another fantastic video! The contrast between what safe, accessible infrastructure is like vs. when cities just slap some paint down on people-hostile streets is so clear. I hope Surrey can the regional lead on this and make some big moves here, especially since City of Vancouver/ABC seems to be intent on actually moving backwards.
Wales in the UK has a 20mph speed limit in urban areas. It has massively reduced road casualties and made cycling far more accessible.
The absence of biking infrastructure is especially painful considering just HOW MUCH WASTED SPACE THERE IS! You could easily, EASILY have dedicated bike paths criss-crossing the suburbs but NIMBYs are just too stuck up to see any resemblance of change…
The music in this video is on point! Well done!
Great video! Some sweet drone shots here. I love cycling around Vancouver, but when you hit those lane with just the painted line...yeah, it feels like a miracle you make it out unscathed.
Great video. Next time I ride in surrey I'll make sure to bring my brick!
I just wanted to share my experience as someone living in the Blue Mountain area of Coquitlam. Suburbs can vary a lot, and for me, the main artery connecting me to the downtown core and my workplace without crazy detours and added elevation is the Lougheed Highway. Unfortunately, cycling on Lougheed Highway is truly terrifying due to the lack of proper cycling infrastructure. It would be fantastic if there were improvements to make it safer for cyclists.
Great video. So many videos are about how we need to densify to make cycling more attractive. Sure, it's still not great for walking but this video was a great argument for suburbs being find for riding.
As someone who commutes to work in the suburbs all it would take for the suburbs to be more viable is for businesses to bring back their bike racks. I'd prefer other things as well, but bare minimum I need a place to keep my bike. It would be nice if some of the larger stores had secure bike lockups. It would be nice if there were more bike lanes. Separation from car traffic would be optimal. But bare minimum if I go somewhere I need to put my bike somewhere and currently I only know of one grocery store that has a small bike rack, it's out of the way and kind of sketchy and I don't want to use it. Bring bike racks inside where staff can easily see if there's someone with an angle grinder.
I do want to say one thing though, those places shown as not great for cycling, with painted bike lanes that shares with cars...it's really not that bad. The editing makes it seem chaotic and scary but I honestly don't feel unsafe at all. I was really worried after I decided to start cycling to work but once I actually got going it was fine. The places I do feel unsafe are large roads without a bike lane, but I avoid those.
So I want to encourage people who are considering cycling to work, or anywhere, to do it. It's likely scarier in your head than in reality. Pick a route you think works best and do a test run.
We here in the Netherlands also do not have separated bike lanes everywhere. Also many "bike suggestion lanes" are mostly made. These are red painted lanes with white non-continuing lines next to them. We are used to them and it works okay. In the narrow streets where I come from there are no bike lanes. But where possible, separated bike lanes are made. Here a street view link. You can go through the streets. Take a look maps.app.goo.gl/zBP1phRQBdS4fMFg8?g_st=ac
At the other side of the water you see a 4-lane 70 kmh road west of the city and it has separated bike lanes.
Holy shit! Fraser hwy looks so scary. And I ride parts of Kingsway in Van. Another great video, Uytae. Thank you for all your hard work
Such a timely video! With families feeling the crunch of the rental housing market for 3 bd apartments within the city, this offers hope that with a little research, one can still find a neighborhood that finds that balance with a cargo e-bike.
I imagine an e-bike would have helped your ride even more so glad you used an "acoustic" for an easier, more accessible option to getting started.
you're sooo right!
The bike bus was so cute!!!
In schools we teach students valuable life skills like reading, writing, math, exercise, etc. It would be cool to see Bicycle Education incorporated into the curriculum too!
It's better than a concept for a while. Here's a program called safety town in the USA. I volunteered one year for it when I was in highschool. But yes, Street knowledge is not knowledge. That's sacred to driver's education.
I would. I argue that we don't do enough Street/drivers in children's education.
We do it a bit here in Québec, there's a programme from Vélo Québec called Cycliste averti, but it depends on Foundations funding it.
We have that in Germany
add urban planning to that list. kids should know about developing our cities a lot younger than we currently expose them to, if at all.
We have that in the Netherland. You also do a bicycle examen. All kids go to school per bicycle.
Of course you could also look at Dutch suburbs. It would be strange to compare North American suburbs to Dutch city centers.
Here in Fayetteville, Arkansas, they LOVE the little paint line next to the gutter. The bike lane on the highway in this video is twice as wide as my city's bike lanes. We have some dedicated multi-use trails, but all but 1 aren't well-connected to amenities, and few are connected together.
Ironically, when i lived in saanich, i gave up on biking, because the route to UVIC was pretty bad.
But they've done so much in the last 6 years or so.
I had a friend who rode the galloping goose from saanich to esquimalt, across the inlet, and i was jealous.
Now i ride to work sometimes, but crossing the alex Fraser bridge isn't all that stress free.
The Goose is such an awesome path. Especially connecting to Lochside. Biking to the ferry has never been easier. If only the Lower Mainland would put cycling infrastructure on their side
So, first of all, I really appreciate this video.
I'm a big fan of the hypothesis that protected/separated bike lanes can re-establish norms and help would-be cyclists feel safe. Having regularly cycled in Saanich many times, both on "the Goose" (as we call it) and on roads that currently lack separated bike lanes (but are about to get them), like Shelbourne, I can absolutely say that separated bike lanes are a nice option when available. I can also say that I don't always use them and I sometimes dislike them (e.g. when I need to make a turn but the bike lane restricts me from moving into a car lane that I need to use to turn left. Which is a distasteful but unavoidable necessity, sometimes).
I'm an academic economist at UVic, so here are a few 'economist comments' (they sound like criticisms to everyone who's not an economist, but they're sincere comments) on the content:
1) Is there an associated paper with this study? If so, I'd like to read it. Hopefully it already addresses the next couple comments. If not, I think it's important to consider these things when trying to properly ascertain the impact of things like separated bike lanes on cycling uptake.
2) While Saanich does have and is further developing good cycling infrastructure, I'm still highly suspicious that Saanich's high rate of cycling is largely due to the interaction of UVic being in Saanich and the fact that the Greater Victoria area (of which Saanich is the largest city) is the most temperate climate in Canada. Also, it's reasonably flat. Surrey does have an SFU campus that should make things somewhat comparable, but a proper statistical analysis of things would account for e.g. the proportion of rainy days and the proportion of the population that regularly attends a higher ed. institution.
3) I spent 5 years living in Davis, California to do my PhD at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis). Davis is often referred to (for various reasons. Some might contest the claim) as "the Bike Capital of North America". I can attest to the fact that the per capita number of bike trips was truly massive. Yet, to my point (2), Davis has fantastic year-round weather for cycling (February could sometimes bring a few days of rain, but those were rare). It's also incredibly flat. Finally, and probably most importantly, the city essentially exists to support UC Davis, which enrolls or employs the vast majority of residents. Keeping all of this in mind, the relevant thing to note is that the cycling infrastructure is largely painted lanes. This fact was often lamented by residents I met (e.g. my barber). Furthermore, the norms in Davis were just different than in pretty much every other city I've been in: cyclists were so prominent that drivers would regularly stop in the middle of four-way stop intersections to let cyclists cross in front of them regardless of who arrived first. This was a necessity, because cyclists were so comfortable in Davis that they often paid zero attention to cars and road signs, and often even were staring at their phones while cycling, because the norms just made things so safe for them that they could effectively do whatever they wanted. Taking all this together, Davis stands as a counterpoint to the claims made in this video.
So... I'm cautiously optimistic about the claims made in the video. But I need to see a sound econometric (statistical) analysis that considers these sorts of covariates before I confidently embrace the conclusions. I need to see a better identification strategy than simply Surrey vs. Saanich alongside summary statistics. If you want to take this analysis to the next stage, feel free to get in touch with me (wiltshire(at)uvic(dot)ca).
You guys have the important stuff covered, I'm just here to point out how gorgeous that lugged, steel-frame road bike is. Uytae is clearly a man of culture.
i live in a small town in north italy(5k of population), we have great bike infrastructure for a small town approximately 13 bike path/lane, 3 of these are connected to other town.
i actually prefer bike in small town compared to cities, cuz they have better infrastructure. (at least here where i live)
Richmond is surprisingly good to bike around. So much potential there. (And it's flat!)
i feel like ive watched a lot of urban transportation videos but this is def one of the best ones ive seen. nice work!
I've lived in areas both like Surrey and Saanich. I'm a pretty brave/risky bike rider so I'm comfortable with painted bike lanes but I've found that convincing the majority of people to ride even next to slow moving traffic is difficult. Over the past couple of years my mindset about how to get better cycling infrastructure has changed significantly. I used to think that having more riders and demand will force cities to build good infrastructure but that's just clearly unreasonable (just as you've described). Even for myself, I got a car and realized how much my mental health and motivations to run errands actually got better because I wasn't always in a high stress mode on the road (extremely ironic I know as car accidents are so common and distracted drivers are the worst).
I try so hard to not be doomer about this reality and sometimes watching these types of videos makes me more doomer. But you've done a great job of highlighting ways to promote real change (bike education programs, group rides, and community building) that reassures me that I'm doing the right thing for the world I want to see. I really encourage people to look for and volunteer for local groups doing the work at a grassroots level - searching on social media specifically instagram has worked best for me
As someone who used to commute to City Centre by bike from South Surrey, I can say there are great bike lanes in Surrey. There's a BC Hydro right of way near 128th Street and others that run west to east from City Centre to Langley. The problem from what I experienced is quick, safe, and easy access to these routes. Way finding, protected lanes, lighting and more routes connecting North to South Surrey would be very helpful.
You also need bike racks where one can lock the FRAME of the bike to a secure structure at the destination. Most bike racks only allow one to lock one of the tires, making it extremely easy to steal a bike.
Your great man, love your videos (and your music choices)!
If there were protected bike lanes, I would use an ebike or my electric unicycle to get around a little more often.
I live in the area you biked! I totally agree, Surrey infrastructure isn't orientated for anyone, but with the skytrain extension coming hopefully new bike and walking routes can be added.
I’m a cyclist who works in Saanich (and lives less than 100m from the border of Saanich). Cycling really is the best method of commute for me. Driving a car would mean that I’d have to go around the massive Cedar Hill Golf Course, which has several busy intersections around its corners, whereas a bike path lets me cut through it and saves me probably 25% of the time. Taking the bus is far worse because the only routes require me to walk to the end of the block and take two buses that ultimately make a V shape, taking around 30 minutes, when I can get to my work in 12 minutes by bike. I have to cross some busy streets, but there are designated crossings.
There are some cracks in this perfect cycling utopia, though, and most of them are centred around Shelbourne Street, a main thoroughfare that is currently closed for construction. That’s led to people taking residential roads as detours, which has made some roads that are usually safe to bike on seem a lot more treacherous. There are also some places where the bike lane just inexplicably ends, such as patches on Cedar Hill Road (one of the roads that people are using instead of Shelbourne). But overall, I can’t complain. It really is easy to get by by bike in this city.
Thanks for the video!
in addition to safe bike infrastucture meaning seperated bike lanes not painted bike gutter - it's also great to add safe/secure bike parking at destinations to the conversation. I'm always nervous about biking somewhere when I don't know if I'm going to have a good visable place to lock up my bike.
What you point out in the video is something I've often found to be true in the suburbs: cycling is possible, but whenever you hit a stroad (which is often), things get tense because it's usually just you and a painted bike lane (or nothing at all) and drivers get quite close without really caring. Some even have this weird animosity toward bikers (I'm looking at you, massive pickup truck dude who never hauls anything) and will actively try to mess with you.
Well said!
One thing that unites many suburbs is very wide streets, which makes adding wide, well protected bike lanes a lot easier than in denser cities with older narrow streets. I believe in great cycling infrastructure everywhere (and I think we should sacrifice parking in city cores to get it) but the argument could easily be made that the suburbs are the best place to start.
I usually don't take my bicycle inside the big city.
Suburbs and small villages are great to get around with the bicycle. So you don't need the car for local traffic that is beyond walking distance.
And of course, riding your bicycle in nature is the most fun.