Yesterday in Milan there was the MilleMilaBici (could be translated with “thousand and thousand bikes”) event. It was a beautiful show.
For once the streets were for people, silent, no pollution, no fight for space.
crossposted from: https://mastodon.uno/users/rivoluzioneurbanamobilita/statuses/113264498677362428
Are there some examples where critical mass actually caused some change? I see them ride every now and then but I don’t really see anything happening as a result. It just seems to be getting ignored.
Critical Mass was so successful in San Francisco that it almost doesn’t exist anymore. These days discussions of bike lanes is more about what kind of lane rather than if bikes should even be allowed on the road.
https://www.kqed.org/news/11941576/the-night-that-changed-san-francisco-cycling-forever
(Not in US) just 20 minutes ago I had to drive in the bike lane.
It’s not my fault though, the city also marked it as the turning lane.
If I didn’t drive in the bike lane to make a turn, I would have been ticketed.
Yes, there were traffic enforcers standing at that corner. (During rush hour, they are everywhere.)
Ten years after critical mass protests in my city we have a lot (and I mean a lot) more pavements and bike roads (between pedestrian pavements and streets). I manage to get to my work in approximately the same time as with bus along with hundreds of fellow bikers.
This is awesome. I wish my city would get on board with this.
Honestly Milan is not really bike friendly (even if sloooowly getting better), that’s why we need this kind of demonstrations