The Star Malaysia - Star2

The great bicycle resurgence

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ANDRE Wu and a dozen or so other people queue up at an appropriat­e social distance outside Brixton Cycles in south London to buy a new bike.

“During this pandemic crisis I was thinking that doing public transport was not something I was looking forward to again, so I was like, OK, let’s just get a bicycle,” said Wu.

As coronaviru­s lockdown measures are gradually eased in Britain and across Europe, he is not alone.

Brixton Cycles director Lincoln Romain said his company has received such increased demand that suppliers had run out of stock.

“We’ve seen a mixture of everybody to be honest,” he said.

“We’ve seen commuters, people that commute all the time, we’ve seen new cyclists, we’ve seen people that have to get in so they have bikes that have been in the shed a little while.”

Britain has the second-worst pandemic death toll in the world, but stay-at-home restrictio­ns has been partially lifted in England last week.

People unable to work from home have been encouraged to avoid public transport when they return to their jobs to prevent overcrowdi­ng and the risk of close-contact transmissi­on.

In London, that means making a choice between using the undergroun­d “Tube”, taking the bus or getting back on the saddle.

Transport minister Grant Shapps said many had already made their choice.

“During this crisis, millions of people have discovered cycling – whether for exercise or as a means of safe, socially-distanced transport,” he said.

To cope with increased demand, the government has announced an emergency plan of £250mil (Rm1.3bil) to adapt transport in the face of the epidemic.

Part of the funding will be used to create temporary cycle paths or widen already existing ones in the coming weeks.

But cyclist Kelly Wise said there were still concerns about safety.

“People forget they still need to social-distance when stopped at traffic lights and not to tailgate so close behind another cyclists,” she said.

“Someone could cough in front of you and you could breath it in.

“I’ve experience­d this. Someone stopped right next to me at a red light and this was during the worse part of the virus outbreak.”

The upsurge in cycling has become a trend across Europe.

In Barcelona, the use of cycle paths has increased by 325% during peak hours, according to the city’s head of urban planning, Janet Sanz.

Similar initiative­s to the one in Britain have emerged in most major European cities.

Barcelona is adding 21km of additional cycle lanes. Berlin is adding 22km and Brussels, 40km.

In France, Paris, Nice, Rouen, Lille and Nantes are following suit.

Even Italy, the European country with the most cars per capita, is getting back on track.

At least 150km of cycle paths will be built in Rome, which has a reputation as impractica­l and dangerous for cyclists. – AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? ‘during this crisis, millions of people have discovered cycling – whether for exercise or as a means of safe, socially-distanced transport,’ says Grant shapps, British transport minister.
— AFP ‘during this crisis, millions of people have discovered cycling – whether for exercise or as a means of safe, socially-distanced transport,’ says Grant shapps, British transport minister.

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