Los Angeles Business Journal
Los Angeles Business Journal
Search last 90 days
ARCHIVES SEARCH
SIGN IN
WRITE US
Los Angeles Business News
Los Angeles Business Journal
 

INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC NEWS STORIES:
LABJ Poll
What do you think about increases in parking fines and traffic tickets, plus more red light cameras?
Los Angeles Business news
  That's OK. Just obey the law.
  No. Higher fines and increased enforcement are becoming too costly for too many people.
Los Angeles Business news
View Results
 
 

Pumping Up the Plea to Make L.A. More Bike-Friendly

By RICHARD RISEMBERG

It was heartening to read Ted Lux’s editorial (“Peddling a Bike-Friendly L.A.” in the Aug. 10 issue) calling for more bicycling and the infrastructure to support it here in Los Angeles. As one who has been promoting the bicycle as transportation for more than 12 years, and riding to work, shopping, to doctors’ and dentists’ offices, and what have you in Los Angeles for more than 40 years, I’d like to add a somewhat extended footnote to Lux’s excellent article.

The environmental benefits of practical cycling are well known – not only do bicycles use no fuel, they require very little space for parking and for travel. While it seems paradoxical that cycling groups are asking for infrastructure that requires yet more paving, in the long run, more cycling will lessen the demand for the far more extensive acres of asphalt that cars require, thereby saving the city money.

Likewise for health: Though many fear cycling, statistics show that it is no more dangerous than driving in the United States. (In Northern Europe, it is less dangerous than driving!) And the increase in cardiovascular and psychological health resulting from cycling (or walking, of course) reduces public (and personal) health costs.

The bicycle is the most efficient machine ever devised, losing only 2 percent of the energy input at the pedals by the time the rubber hits the road. Nothing else even comes close.

In fact, cycling is so efficient that if you want to lose weight, walking is better – cycling uses one-third the calories per mile at four to five times the speed of shoe leather. But it is precisely this combination of speed and efficiency that makes it feasible to cycle instead of drive, when you would simply be sitting on your posterior for those same miles.

You also can carry astounding quantities of stuff on a bicycle, if you’re of a consumerist bent. I recently road-tested a Swedish cargo bike on which I carried my wife and a load of groceries that included a watermelon, for a total load of 150 pounds!

But something else happens when you ride instead of drive, something of particular interest to a city’s business community: At cycling’s transportational pace of 15 miles an hour, you find yourself much more aware of the world you inhabit – the weather, the state of the road, your neighbors, your city’s architecture, and so forth. You enrich your life by seeing things you otherwise would have missed.

Saving economies

And that includes stores. For it turns out that cycling does more than save the world and enrich your soul: It can save economies and enrich your business community.

Our northern rival recently discovered this, thanks to the San Francisco County Transportation Authority’s On-Street Parking Management and Pricing Study. To quote a recent report: “The SFCTA study looked in depth at parking issues in four San Francisco neighborhoods – Cow Hollow, West Portal, Hayes Valley and Bernal Heights. The study surveyed parking availability, parking turnover, and parking duration, and interviewed merchants and residents. Among the study’s findings were that both businesses and residents were willing to pay more for parking in return for greater availability, and that while merchants in the four neighborhoods thought that 72 percent of their customers ‘drove exclusively’ to the neighborhood, over 70 percent of their customers walked, cycled, or took transit.” (For the complete article, with links to data, see: www.livablecity.org/campaigns/parking.html.)


  February 8 - 14, 2010
LA Business News
Convention-al Appeal
New downtown hotels and a bustling L.A. Live scene are hailed as big convention business boosters.
Owner Back in the Saddle at Santa Anita Race Track
A deal with creditors will allow owner Frank Stronach to hold on to the reins of Santa Anita Park.
Unions Dropping Anchor in Long Beach?
The Port of Long Beach’s use of project labor agreements may maroon nonunion contractors.
Local Latinos Make Chinese Connection
A contingent of Latino officials from L.A. cities overcame culture clash on a recent trip to China.
Browse the complete Table of Contents - stories, charts, and editorial - for the current edition of the Journal

Printer-friendly version E-mail to an associate Search Home
   

All contents of this site © 2010 Los Angeles Business Journal Associates. All rights reserved.
Los Angeles Business Journal, Los Angeles, CA 90036, USA. | Powered by FLEX360