The World of Chinese

PEDAL POWER

骑行时代

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It has been decades since China was known as the Bicycle Kingdom, but commuting by pedal is by no means out of fashion. These days, cars share the roads with electrifie­d and evolved two- or three-wheelers that deliver lunches, ferry produce, and serve as modified multi-seat family vans. Make way: The bikes are coming

Take a seat in the kingdom of the tricycle

能在拥堵的街道上自由­穿行,自行车和电动车是大众­生活必不可少的交通工­具;五花八门的改装也让它­们成了都市里饶

有趣味的风景

According to the famous Bengali proverb, “If you care about one another, then nine of you can tuck yourselves in one tamarind leaf.” Sharing is the kindest policy when resources are scarce— something that the world’s most populous nation knows all too well.

For those who have been stuck in rush-hour traffic, or squeezed through the veins of Chinese metropolis­es by subway, it may spark envy to see another commute option zooming by on the bicycle paths. In the former Bicycle Kingdom, the humble twoand three-wheelers have by no means disappeare­d, though their place in the “big three” marriage items—not to mention dominance on the road— have long been ceded to the brand new BMW.

Instead, bikes have evolved; become electrifie­d; and adapted into makeshift family “micro-vans” or delivery vehicles providing lifelines of sustenance to a plethora of office workers. Seniors picking up their grandchild­ren from school, or keen not to miss a sale at the local market, add DIY seats to the back of their bike. It’s the original “bike share” economy—and safer than the past option of wedging the grandchild­ren and groceries between their knees and handlebar. In the morning, roads to Beijing are still full with pedaling peddlers bringing everything under the sun—from grapes to goldfish— into the city on tricycle beds.

Delivery workers, of course, are the masters of the bike commute, their scooters beeping importantl­y as documents, consumer products, and food are swerved through traffic.

“We can fix up a bike seat for a passenger of any height; it’s easy,” promises Mr. Cai, a roadside bike repairman. No one knows who exactly invented these patentless innovation­s, but in China’s fiercely competitiv­e first-tier cities, commuters will do anything to put their best wheel forward. As Cai assures, “They don’t really enforce the laws about what you can and can’t do to bikes.”

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 ??  ?? AN ORDINARY TRICYCLE, ORIGINALLY FOUND TRANSPORTI­NG GOODS IN RURAL AREAS, IS CONVERTED INTO A MOBILE PET SHOP IN THE CITY
AN ORDINARY TRICYCLE, ORIGINALLY FOUND TRANSPORTI­NG GOODS IN RURAL AREAS, IS CONVERTED INTO A MOBILE PET SHOP IN THE CITY
 ??  ?? ROADSIDE BIKE SHOPS OFFER REGULAR REPAIRS, BUT SOME CUSTOMERS ALSO ASK TO INSTALL EXTRA BIKE SEATS AND OTHER INNOVATION­S
ROADSIDE BIKE SHOPS OFFER REGULAR REPAIRS, BUT SOME CUSTOMERS ALSO ASK TO INSTALL EXTRA BIKE SEATS AND OTHER INNOVATION­S

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