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#1 |
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On Jun 25, 3:15*am, Artemisia <e.rose...@free.fr> wrote:
> Here's an article, in French, in today's Le Figaro about the first > anniversary of the introduction of the Vélib free public bicycle > scheme and its successes and costs. > > The upshot is, Velib brings in big money to the City of Paris, but is > extremely costly to JCDecaux, the advertizing firm that is under > contract to supply and maintain the bikes in return for advertizing > poster space. The main reason for the high costs being, surprise me, > vandalism and theft. Thanks, it is an interesting article. It certainly seems that Parisiens like the idea. For some reason I had not realized the size of the program. I was thinking in the low 1,000s of bikes not in the teens. The amount of repairs and theft is suprising, especially the theft. From what I remember of the bikes I had not expected them to be that popular a target for thieves. I got a kick out of the tourists riding them in Casablanca. ![]() By the way what's with bus lanes? I had heard about the tram but not a bus lanes fiasco. John Kane Kingston ON Canada |
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#2 |
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On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 11:59:06 -0700 (PDT), John Kane
<jrkrideau@gmail.com> wrote: [---] >By the way what's with bus lanes? I had heard about the tram but not a >bus lanes fiasco. Hardly surprising that you hadn't heard about it, because there is no "bus lane fiasco". Just the usual wishful thinking and biased reporting to be expected from a newspaper like "Le Figaro". |
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#3 |
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"John Kane" <jrkrideau@gmail.com> a écrit:
> By the way what's with bus lanes? I had heard about the > tram but not a bus lanes fiasco. If you mean the user comment: M Delanoë avait déjà saturé les voies ed circulation normale. Maintenant; grâce au Velib, c'est au tour des voies de bus d'être bloquées .E effet, en plaçant massivementd es vélo dans les voies de bus, ceux ci reste bloquée 3/4 du temps derrière un vélo. Il ne peuvent pas le dépasser, car il faut qu'il se rabatte à droite pour un arrêt. Résultat, maintenant en bus on va à la vitesse d'un vélo, sans compter que ceux ci grillent les feux rouges; Mais le fait de dessiner de jolis vélo dans les couloirs de bus, a permsi de les comptabiliser dans les km de piste cyclables crées. On fait cohabiter dans cet espace (souvent clos) des véhicules et des usagers qui n'ont ni les même vitesse ni les pmême susage. Un vélo va doucement mais régulièrement. Un bus accélère, décélère et s'arrête fréquement pour faire monter et descendre les boyageurs. Résultats ces uasagers aux comportement différents ne peuvent cohabiter dans les voies du bus. the complaint is that bicycle signs have been painted in bus lanes to augment the stats for the creation of new cycle lanes. In Paris a bus lane is supposedly for RATP (Paris Transport Authority) vehicles *only* unless other vehicles (including bicycles) are explicitly allowed by signage - though in reality taxis and bikes are tolerated. Paris bus lanes usually have a physical barrier of curb height to divide them from the other lanes, and they're typically not much wider than a bus. That means that buses get stuck behind cyclists, and vice versa. I don't have any experience of the problem from a bus passenger's point of view - I haven't taken a bus in my six years here in Paris. As a cyclist, aggression from bus drivers isn't uncommon. James Thomson |
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#4 |
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John Kane wrote:
> The amount of repairs and theft is suprising, especially the theft. > From what I remember of the bikes I had not expected them to be that > popular a target for thieves. I got a kick out of the tourists riding > them in Casablanca. ![]() When the white provo bikes were liberated in Amsterdam the idea finally failed to succeed because people stole them. I never understood why, when it was so easy to take a free bike when you needed one, there were people who had to keep them to themselves. Probably shut away somewhere. |
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#5 |
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On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 23:12:39 +0100, Dan Gregory
<dangregory@brakes.palaver.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: >John Kane wrote: > >> The amount of repairs and theft is suprising, especially the theft. >> From what I remember of the bikes I had not expected them to be that >> popular a target for thieves. I got a kick out of the tourists riding >> them in Casablanca. ![]() >When the white provo bikes were liberated in Amsterdam the idea finally >failed to succeed because people stole them. I never understood why, >when it was so easy to take a free bike when you needed one, there were >people who had to keep them to themselves. Probably shut away somewhere. Possibly because people are selfish? |
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#6 |
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On Jun 25, 6:12*pm, Dan Gregory
<dangreg...@brakes.palaver.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: > John Kane wrote: > > The amount of repairs and theft is suprising, especially the theft. > > From what I remember of the bikes I had not expected them to be that > > popular a target for thieves. *I got a kick out of the tourists riding > > them in Casablanca. ![]() > > When the white provo bikes were liberated in Amsterdam the idea finally > failed to succeed because people stole them. I never understood why, > when it was so easy to take a free bike when you needed one, there were > people who had to keep them to themselves. Probably shut away somewhere. Were they "stolen" or just not returned? In parts of my town you can see abandoned grocery shopping carts that people without cars seem to have "borrowed". There does not seem to be any intend to keep the carts. Of course the store has a nasty cost in recovering them John Kane Kingston ON Canada |
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