Thanks for your story of what is possible (and more) for America & the
world.
Tony Del Plato
Mythaca


On 6/21/08, Katherine Lieberknecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> We moved to Eugene, OR from Ithaca 10 months ago. I still lurk on the ST
> listserv, and I've always meant to write a little bit about Eugene when
> the topic of cycling and Ithaca comes up. Living in Eugene has really
> normalized cycling-- as a method of commuting to work and to errands and
> events-- for me.
>
> Cyclists here definitely have more company than in Ithaca. Something
> like 6 percent of people in Eugene/Springfield area bike to work
> (population around 340,000). Eugene has a network of bike/walk paths,
> but also bike lanes on many major streets. Until a few weeks ago, we
> rented a house here that happened to be on the street with a well-used
> bike lane that connects one of the major bike paths from a residential
> area to the downtown and campus areas. I felt like I lived in
> Amsterdam-- when I looked outside our window, I usually saw 15-20 bikes
> for every car. There is literally a bicycle rush hour, when it almost
> looked like a Critical Mass event, except it was just people biking home
> after work. Some mornings, when I was awake before the sun was up, in
> the darkness I would see dozens of  bicycle lights passing by my
> window-- like little fairies floating by.
>
> One of the things I've enjoyed the most is seeing the diversity of
> bicycles used-- regular bikes, tandem bikes, bikes with cart-like
> trailers for young kids (and sometimes dogs), adult bikes with partial
> kid bikes attached like a tandem bike, James Bond-esque bikes that fold
> up into little suitcases so that you can carry them into your office or
> onto the train, recumbent bikes, etc.. Last year, when Eugene has their
> Eugene Celebration parade (similar to Ithaca Fest), the City Council
> rode through the parade in a series of bicycles made for six-- designed
> so that the seats face each other in a circle (not a realistic commuting
> option, I know, but fun to see, nonetheless).
>
> The University of Oregon campus has thousands of bicycle parking spots
> (the ones with roofs are coveted during the rainy winter weather), and
> many of the downtown businesses have ample bicycle parking, too. Rob
> went (biked) to a concert last night, held outside at a park next to the
> river, and reported that there were more bicycles than cars in the
> parking area.
>
> Of course, compared with Ithaca, Eugene has more housing in the flats
> (people live in the hills here, too, but there are lots of neighborhoods
> in the river valley area). The weather is milder. Traffic calming on the
> streets that have been designated major bike routes through the city
> helps; so do the bike paths, especially, I imagine, for those not
> comfortable bicycling in traffic (for instance, now that my youngest
> child is sitting up, we're ready to take our first
> everyone-in-the-family bike ride, with both kids in the bike trailer,
> but I think we'll start on the bike path).
>
> And, of course, there is massive room for improvement. Both Rob and I
> have dealt with tailgating, cursing car drivers behind us. Even worse,
> one Saturday morning, we heard a thump and a scream-- a driver of a car
> didn't see a bicyclist and crashed into her in the intersection just
> down the street from our house. The bicyclist suffered some bruises, but
> fortunately she wasn't seriously injured. She was wearing a helmet, and
> the car driver was going pretty slowly because she had just stopped at a
> stop sign. But, a few weeks ago in Eugene, a car driver hit a cyclist
> who was turning left. The cyclist died. The cyclist wasn't wearing a
> helmet, but it sounds as if he would have suffered major, if not deadly,
> injuries, even with a helmet.
>
> I don't know the "birth story" of how Eugene became so bike friendly
> (although I'm sure someone on this listserv might), so my point here is
> not to prescribe for Ithaca-- it's just to paint a picture of what it's
> like to live in a place where bicyclists have more of a presence than in
> Ithaca.
>
> Happy summer,
>
> Kat Lieberknecht
>
> _______________________________________________
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> please visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/
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-- 

"Justice is what love looks like in public."
~ Dr. Cornel West
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