All posts tagged best cities

The Dutch Way: Bicycles and Fresh Bread

SHORTO-articleLarge-v2

July 31, 2011 New York Times Sun­day Review “Opinion”

The Dutch Way: Bicy­cles and Fresh Bread

Robin Utrecht/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

 

In the Nether­lands, respect for bicy­cles is hard-wired into the cul­ture.
By RUSSELL SHORTO

Pub­lished: July 30, 2011

 

 

 

Related Arti­cle: Across Europe, Irk­ing Dri­vers Is Urban Pol­icy (June 27, 2011)

Ams­ter­dam

As an Amer­i­can who has been liv­ing here for sev­eral years, I am struck, every time I go home, by the way Amer­i­can cities remain man­a­cled to the car. While Europe is deal­ing with con­ges­tion and green­house gas buildup by turn­ing urban cen­ters into pedes­trian zones and find­ing inno­v­a­tive ways to com­bine dri­ving with pub­lic trans­porta­tion, many Amer­i­can cities are carv­ing out more park­ing spaces. It’s all the more bewil­der­ing because America’s col­laps­ing infra­struc­ture would seem to cry out for new solutions.

Geog­ra­phy partly explains the dif­fer­ence: Amer­ica is spread out, while Euro­pean cities pre­date the car. But Boston and Philadel­phia have old cen­ters too, while the periph­eral sprawl in Lon­don and Barcelona mir­rors that of Amer­i­can cities.

More impor­tant, I think, is mind-set. Take bicy­cles. The advent of bike lanes in some Amer­i­can cities may seem like a big step, but merely mark­ing a strip of the road for recre­ational cycling spec­tac­u­larly misses the point. In Ams­ter­dam, nearly every­one cycles, and cars, bikes and trams coex­ist in a com­plex flow, with ded­i­cated bicy­cle lanes, traf­fic lights and park­ing garages. But this is thanks to a dif­fer­ent way of think­ing about transportation.

To give a small but telling exam­ple, pointed out to me by my friend Ruth Olden­ziel, an expert on the his­tory of tech­nol­ogy at Eind­hoven Uni­ver­sity, Dutch dri­vers are taught that when you are about to get out of the car, you reach for the door han­dle with your right hand — bring­ing your arm across your body to the door. This forces a dri­ver to swivel shoul­ders and head, so that before open­ing the door you can see if there is a bike com­ing from behind. Like­wise, every Dutch child has to pass a bicy­cle safety exam at school. The coex­is­tence of dif­fer­ent modes of travel is hard-wired into the culture.

This in turn relates to lots of other things — such as bread. How? Cyclists can’t carry six bags of gro­ceries; bulk buy­ing is almost nonex­is­tent. Instead of shop­ping for a week, peo­ple stop at the mar­ket daily. So the need for processed loaves that will last for days is gone. A result: good bread.

There are also in the United States cer­tain per­cep­tions asso­ci­ated with both cycling and pub­lic trans­porta­tion that are not the case here. In Hol­land, pub­lic buses aren’t con­sid­ered last-resort forms of trans­porta­tion. And cycling isn’t seen as eco-friendly exer­cise; it’s a way to get around. C.E.O.’s cycle to work, and kids cycle to school.

It’s true that pub­lic pol­icy rein­forces the egal­i­tar­i­an­ism. With manda­tory lessons and other fees, get­ting a driver’s license costs more than $1,000. And taxi fares are kept delib­er­ately high: a trip from the air­port may cost $80, while a 20-minute bus ride sets you back about $3.50. But the egal­i­tar­i­an­ism — or maybe bet­ter said a pref­er­ence for sim­plic­ity — is also rooted in the cul­ture. A 17th-century French naval com­man­der was shocked to see a Dutch cap­tain sweep­ing out his own quar­ters. Like­wise, I used to run into the mayor of Ams­ter­dam at the super­mar­ket, and he wasn’t engaged in a pop­ulist stunt (may­ors aren’t elected here but are gov­ern­ment appointees); he was shopping.

For Amer­i­can cities to think out­side the car would seem to require a men­tal sea change. Then again, Amer­i­cans, too, are prac­ti­cal, no-nonsense peo­ple. And Zef Hemel, the chief plan­ner for the city of Ams­ter­dam, reminded me that sea changes do hap­pen. “Back in the 1960s, we were doing the same thing as Amer­ica, mak­ing cities car-friendly,” he said. Fun­nily enough, it was an Amer­i­can, Jane Jacobs, who changed the minds of Euro­pean urban design­ers. Her book “The Death and Life of Great Amer­i­can Cities” got Euro­pean plan­ners to shift their focus from car-friendliness to over­all livability.

When I noted that Manhattan’s bike lanes seem to be used more for recre­ation than trans­port — cyclists in Ams­ter­dam are dressed in every­thing from jeans to cock­tail dresses, while those in Man­hat­tan often look like span­dex cyborgs — Mr. Hemel told me to give it time. “Those are the pio­neers,” he said. “You have to start somewhere.”

What he meant was, “You start with bike lanes” — that is, with the con­vic­tion that urban plan­ning can bring about ben­e­fi­cial cul­tural changes. But that points up another men­tal dif­fer­ence: the will­ing­ness of Euro­peans to fol­low top-down social plan­ning. America’s famed indi­vid­u­al­ism breeds an often healthy dis­trust of the elite. I’m as quick as any other red-blooded Amer­i­can to bris­tle at Euro­pean tech­nocrats telling me how to live. (Try buy­ing a light bulb or a mag­a­zine after 6 p.m. in Ams­ter­dam, where the polit­i­cal elite have decreed that work­ers’ well-being requires that shops be open only dur­ing stan­dard office hours, pre­cisely when most peo­ple can’t shop.)

But while many Amer­i­cans see their cars as an exten­sion of their indi­vid­ual free­dom, to some of us own­ing a car is a bur­den, and in a city a dou­ble bur­den. I find the recraft­ing of the city in order to lessen — or elim­i­nate — the need for cars to be not just grudg­ingly accept­able, but, yes, an expan­sion of my indi­vid­ual free­dom. So I say (in this case, at least): Go, social-planning tech­nocrats! If only America’s cities could be so free.
A ver­sion of this op-ed appeared in print on July 31, 2011, on page SR5 of the New York edi­tion with the head­line: The Dutch Way: Bicy­cles and Fresh Bread.