Traffic in Assen in May 1979. Many readers will see similarities between this film and the appearance of their own city. I certainly see similarities between the film and British cities. Before and after images of some of the same locations can be found here and here.
As the danger of cycling increased, people cycled less. 1978 was the year when things finally turned around, infrastructure started to improve safety and people started cycling more. There is no support for the fictional "safety in numbers" idea in this data. The much lower cycling modal share of the more recent period compared with the 1950s and 60s and the continued decline in injuries against relatively little cycling growth during the 80s and onwards is the direct result of infrastructure separating cyclists from motor vehicles |
The resulting conditions not only made cycling unpleasant due to low subjective safety scaring people away from cycling, but also led to the highest number of deaths per km travelled by bike that was ever recorded in the Netherlands.
The "Visie Aantrekkelijke binnenstad 2030" from 2011 promised an increasingly Autoluwe future for Assen, but that's not the direction we're heading in. |
It was only by implementing policies which prioritized cycling and deliberately improved the safety of cyclists that conditions in Dutch cities were changed from the unpleasant scenes seen in the film above. There are twice as many cars in the Netherlands now as there were when the film above was made, but cycling is far more pleasant and far safer these days than it was then.
However this doesn't mean the battle was won and that everything is going well. In fact, some of the lessons of the 1970s and 1980s are now being ignored in the Netherlands. New infrastructure which makes cycling less convenient and less safe is now being built.
Local paper: Parking garages are now full due to the change in policy. But who benefits from this ? |
But the income from the parking has fallen because many drivers only use the free supermarket parking tickets (short term) |
The increased parking in the centre has not benefitted the council because while the car parks and roads leading to them are now busier than they were, the total income from car parking has actually dropped by €100K per year as a result of the new policy. It also doesn't benefit shop-keepers because now that drivers use only the free tickets from the supermarkets to quickly do their shopping, they don't wander around to other shops and spend money there as well. The out of centre free parking used to enable this. Of course this policy which brings more cars to the city centre certainly doesn't help cyclists.
To add to the woes of the businesses in the centre of Assen, the council is supporting the building of an outlet centre on the outskirts of the city which of course will offer free parking and will help to ensure that out-of-towners use Assen's shops even less than now.
Below you'll find examples of how access to the city centre has been compromised from several directions:
From the North
The Molenbrug provides part of a main route to the city centre for people from the North-East. The narrowing of the bridge had already taken place when I wrote about this bridge last year, but at that time we still had a traffic light to stop cars. Now that the traffic light has gone as well, cyclists have less priority and worse safety than in the past. The removal of separate pedestrian facilities here also means that at busy times this bridge demonstrates all the problems which come from shared pedestrian and bicycle facilities.
The most dangerous junctions in Assen are uncontrolled crossings. One of them is further along this route to the North West and caused a fatality in 2009.
Read more about how the Molenbrug used to be.
From the North-East
Assen's roundabouts are all of a particularly safe design except for the two new roundabouts which resulted from the FlorijnAs project. These use an inferior design without a central waiting area which makes them dangerous for cyclists to cross. How did Assen lose the ability to construct safe roundabouts ? In this case, the new roundabout has replaced what was a direct priority non-stop through route for cyclists so this also causes an extra delay on a busy cycling route. |
This road is being doubled in width. For motorists there will be two lanes in each direction plus a wide verge in the centre with attractive trees and a new row of car parking spaces which can be seen on the left of this picture. For cyclists, the new scheme brings the cycle-path on the left which is being built a fraction under the supposed minimum width of 3 m (which is actually too narrow for convenience). |
Cycling infrastructure should support side-by-side cycling because this makes cycling more sociable and more attractive. This path is on one of the busiest routes in Assen but at under three metres wide this has been built too narrow for side-by-side cyclists going in both directions, too narrow for safe overtaking. and the lamp-posts are ludicrously close to the path itself. To the right, six lanes for drivers (one parking + two driving lanes + a verge + two driving lanes), all of which are wider than the cycle-path. |
Jan Fabriciusstraat provides access from the East to the city centre. This very wide and busy road has space for multiple vehicle lanes, a grass verge in the centre for much of its length and pavements (sidewalks) of up to 10 m in width, yet cyclists have nothing but a 1.3 m wide on-road cycle-lane which is magnetically attractive for parking trucks. This is an example of wide pavement syndrome. |
Also Jan Fabriciusstraat. Cyclists turning left have to make a 130 degree turn on a very narrow path. |
Read more about Jan Fabriciusstraat
From the East
Assen's railway station, built in 1989, is currently being demolished to make room for a new building. Most cyclists and most drivers in the station area do not have the railway station as their destination but are passing through, so direct through routes are important for both cyclists and drivers.
This video shows the direct routes South to North and East to West which existed across the station area at the beginning of 2015. They're old-fashioned, but efficient. The East-West route dumped cyclists into Stationstraat, a road which was also used by busses, but it was a wide road and unpleasant overtaking events were rare.
According to the architect, people will bring cats to the station. I suspect this will never actually happen in practice. |
South East
South East: Zuidersingel (which leads into Oostersingel) was narrowed and resurfaced in 2013 as part of the works which gave us the unpleasant Kerkplein shared space. The result of this work is that cyclists now find themselves used as mobile traffic calming devices. As I type this, the Zuidersingel layout is already being copied around the corner in Stationstraat as part of the new station development. As a result, the problems for cyclists which already exist in Zuidersingel/Oostersingel will also be seen in Stationstraat which is part of the main route to the city centre for most people who live in the East of Assen. It seems to be taking an awfully long tome for people to realise that "sharing" really doesn't work on busy through routes.
South
The Kerkplein Shared Space already serves as a barrier for people from the South who wish to enter the centre of Assen. With the new parking regime, the amount of traffic here has grown and with the extra traffic the unpleasantness of trying to negotiate this junction has also grown. Read more about the Kerkplein. |
Luckily, redevelopment of some routes directly from the west into the centre of Assen occurred slightly before the FlorijnAs project started and therefore these routes were not in line to be redeveloped. However, they do lead into the areas of De Nieuwe Kolk and the Kerkplein, both of which cause issues for cyclists. Also there is one route from slightly North of West - which as it happens is our most direct route to the city centre, which is being disrupted. The existing primary cycle-route alongside the northern bank of Het Kanaal has been downgraded to a shared use secondary route and the well used footpath alongside has been made unusable to many people by the addition of steps
Constant conflict with pedestrians because while there is a separate pedestrian path, that path is so badly designed (it's down some steps by the water) that almost no pedestrians use it. |
The replacement primary route is on the other side of the canal. Yes, it initially looks OK. However, the details are all wrong. Why have cyclists been short-changed in width once again on a primary cycling route when there is so much space available ? Why has the cycle-path been positioned so close to the road and so close to lamp posts ? Why is there a loading bay on the wrong side of the cycle-path when the empty shop which it is next to has its loading bay in a car park on the other side ? There is no reason to expect large numbers of pedestrians here so the pavement is overly generous. |
Further along the same path cyclists have to give way twice to car park entrances. No priority on a primary cycling route. The old primary route on the other side of the canal worked better than this. Watch a video which shows what remains of the old route, which has been given a rougher surface than in the past. |
I am quite aware that some readers will look at the photos and videos above and wish that they had the same problems as Assen does. Clearly none of the problems shown above quite take us back to how the Netherlands looked in the 1970s. However, they all illustrate new problems which are being created for cyclists in this city due to cycling just not mattering very much to planners and motoring being given a higher priority. If this process continues then it could easily lead to a slow slide downwards in the cycling modal share. People don't have to experience much unpleasantness when cycling to make them give up.
Infrastructure which was built 5-10 years ago was of a higher quality than what is being built now. There is no good reason for this. Certainly not a financial reason as FlorijnAs is an astonishingly well funded project which has a total of €1.5 Billion to spend. The high level of funding combined with any downward change in quality is a serious concern as the extensive works of FlorijnAs will affect all cyclists in Assen and they already put the city back a small step so far as cycling is concerned.
I'm not very concerned as FlorijnAs isn't all of Assen and this still remains a city which overall is lucky enough to have amongst the very best infrastructure in the world. A few small steps backwards won't make a huge difference so long as the ambition to improve is found again.
As I understand it, Assen's previously stated ambition to grow cycling still stands. If this is more than mere words then the city needs to do better than what is shown above to retain present and encourage future cyclists.
What future for other cities ?
One of the problems with writing about the less good developments in this city is that some readers gain an impression that it is only Assen which is making mistakes. That is of course not true - it's just that I'm an trying to give an honest appraisal of the place where I live and there are not so many people doing this. Positive stories abound, including about things which are really not very good at all.
It's really not just Assen. This publicity shot from Groningen, headed "further improvements in cycle facilties" not only lavishes praise on horribly outdated advanced stop lines (bike boxes) but also uses a photo of the most dangerous single street in the city as an aspirational image. I nearly fell from my chair when I read this... Not what you want to emulate. |
However it is important that the attitudes change before too much harm is done. Keep going backwards at this rate and in forty years time the Netherlands will once again look as it did in the 1970s.
Study Tours
Yes, there are study tours again this year. While this blog post points out problems within Assen, this is still a city choc full of good examples. We also visit Groningen, which like any city is also a mix of good and bad and has plenty of its own problems. The majority of both cities work well and this is reflected in the high cycling modal shares. In any case, looking at problem areas gives us an opportunity to demonstrate how what might be seen as rather small issues ("wish I had that problem") actually really are important if a truly high cycling modal share is your aim.
There are still some places available on the April tour, but you will have to be quick to book. Similarly, there are also still places available on the May follow-up tour (contact us for details) on which we demonstrate what changed since your previous study tour.
This is all really depressing David. What is the action taken by the local Fietsersbond chapter? It looks like the wrong people are manning the steering wheel here. This calls for publicity, I'd say, to prevent more of this rubbish being built. Are there articles about this in the local papers?
ReplyDeleteI wonder why in all of these years that there has been good ambition and good standards applied consistently, why no law was ever passed to create legal standards. I mean nobody would tolerate a 2 metre wide lane on a motorway. Hard shoulder, yes, lane, no.
ReplyDeleteHave you seen anyone else complaining in a similar manner? I contacted the city of Assen myself to ask why these mistakes were happening and asked to fix them. I only emailed them a couple days ago, so they haven't responded yet. But it will be interesting to see what they say.
You said that you didn't like having a primary cycle route giving way to a car park entrance, but I thought you insisted on non priority roundabouts?
And finally, I wonder whether you made any posts about low volume uncontrolled (the term doesn't quite make sense to me, that would be a junction without signs, signals or markings at all, you use it to refer to crossings where one road has priority, another does not) roads with distributors and access roads but there is a continuous footway gateway design over the side street and about 5-6 metres of space. Is that safe?
This all sounds a bit gloomy. What do the people of Assen think of these developments? Do they too feel their town is moving in the wrong direction, and if so, what form does the protest take?
ReplyDeleteA separate question: could you tell me where the graph about the turn-around year of 1978 came from? Thanks.
Koen: The local Fietsersbond people are great. I'm not a member, but I go along to their meetings because we have a common cause. We've cycled around the city as a group showing each other the problems which need to be resolved and they've have multiple meetings with council officials to try to prevent bad designs being implemented. Unfortunately, there has been little response from the council as yet.
ReplyDeleteCycling...: As above, people have complained. Indeed it's some time since I spoke at a council meeting when there was concern about the station designs. Nothing has changed as a result of any complaints. I generally try to follow the Bambi principle, but we have no choice but to write about the problems if no-one is listening to quiet complaints.
Yes, I support the safe roundabout design. But what has happened at the two locations where we used to have direct through routes but we now have to give way is that a new and less safe design of roundabout is being used which has no central waiting area for cyclists. In any case, the idea that a roundabout should be used to make cyclists give way to car park entrances is suspect, and the problem here is exacerbated by the greatly increased amount of traffic heading for those car parks.
As for your other question, you may find the answer here.
Berno: I think few people are complaining outright as yet, though there is dissatisfaction. I've had the experience that while standing at the new bridge featured above, people have mistaken me for someone from the council and stopped to complain about the danger and inconvenience of the new design. Of course, the vast majority will then cycle on and say no more.
I forgot to put in a link to the source of the 1978 graph. It came from John Pucher and Ralph Buehler's 'How to make cycling irresistible' which should be downloadable from here.