Pedal power reigns in Moscow
TWO years ago, Luiza Nesterova would never have dreamt of cycling to work in Russia’s capital. But now she bikes everywhere, undeterred by busy roads.
In the city of 12 million, biking round snarled streets seems to make perfect sense, but Moscow “isn’t an easy city for cyclists”, admits 30-yearold Nesterova, a consultant in a finance company.
Every day Nesterova gets on her pale green bike, undaunted, and rides for more than 5 kilometres along very busy roads with no cycle lanes.
“When it snows, I just wear warmer gloves,” she says, adding that she gets in the saddle even when it is minus 27 degrees Celsius.
To encourage other Muscovites to do the same, she has created an Instagram page – @ luizinbike2.0 – that gets viewed more than 5,400 times per day. She often gets interviewed by Russian media and has become a kind of “ambassador” for cycling.
“My dream is for cycling to become the norm and for people not to see me as ‘brave’ any more,” she said. “There are more and more people, who would like to ride bikes but they are very scared of cars here and so drivers don’t learn to share the road with cyclists.”
In a bid to change that negative image, Moscow City Hall has invested in developing cycling over the last couple of years.
In 2013 the city launched its own bike sharing system, Velobike, copying the “Boris Bikes” and “Velib” networks in London and Paris.
Last year, some 196,000 people got bikes from the now 380 stations around the city. The authorities spend some 150 million rubles ($2.5 million) annually on the scheme.
At the same time, Moscow’s modest number of cycle lanes has expanded. But it remains just a fraction of the amount in established bike-friendly capitals in Western Europe.
“Moscow will never become a cycling city like Amsterdam but we hope it will become more and more pleasant to cycle here,” Alexei Mityayev, the city official in charge of cycling, said.
Despite the advances however, the authorities’ focus appears to have slipped off cycling. For the second summer running, the centre of Moscow is a mass of roadworks as part of a reconstruction project ahead of the World Cup in 2018.
While pavements are being widened and thoroughfares repaved, cyclists have been quick to notice that the renovated streets lack one crucial element – bike lanes.
For Nadezhda Zherebina, the city still needs to focus on pro- viding lanes – otherwise riders are forced to use pavements.
“That causes conflicts and situations that are dangerous and pointless,” Zherebina said.
She also called on the authorities to “prioritise clearing snow off cycle lanes over roadways, in order to encourage Muscovites to cycle”.
“Cities like Oslo and Montreal have winters just as cold as ours but they have a strong cycling culture, so why can’t we?” she asks.
According to town planning consulting firm Urbica, snow and bad weather have little impact on Russian cyclists.
“Before, we used our bikes to ride in the park, we didn’t use them to get from A to B. It’s very new for us to think of bikes as a form of transport,” said Zherebina.
For Mityayev, Muscovites’ recent enthusiasm for cycling is a sign of their “desire to reclaim their city”.
“This is also a generational shift: our parents’ generation put the car first,” symbolising individualism after decades of communism, he said.
“Our generation prefers to be free.”