Hometransalt.org
Bicycle Blueprint
Introduction

NYC Cycling
1. NYC Bike Policy
2. State of NYC Cycling
3. Cyclists & Streets
A Bike and a Prayer


Riding Infrastructure
4. Street Design
5. Bridges
6. Road Surfaces
7. Greenways
8. Parks
9. Bicycles and Transit
Reducing Traffic


Security
11. Bicycle Theft
12. On-Street Parking
13. Indoor Parking


On the Job Cycling
14. Bicycle Messengers
Fifth, Park & Madison
15. Freight Cycles
16. Gov't Cycling


Reducing Risks
17. Accidents
Three Who Died
18. Air Pollution


Bicycle Education
19. Schools
20. Public Education


Appendices

      Chapter 10:
Reducing Traffic
a) A Failed Traffic Policy
b) The Toll Traffic Takes
c) A Real Traffic Solution
d) Benefits of Reduced Motor Traffic
 A City Made for Biking
f) Chapter 10 Recommendations

A City Made for Biking

This ordering of priorities mirrors an entrenched nationwide policy, but that doesn't make it valid or sustainable. Dense, crowded New York City cannot continue to support the motor vehicles that now flood its streets. Luckily, the city has better alternatives to offer: the country's finest and most extensive mass-transit network, a density and tradition that encourage walking, and a landscape ideally suited to bicycling.




a) A Failed Traffic Policy
b) The Toll Traffic Takes
c) A Real Traffic Solution
d) Benefits of Reduced Motor Traffic
 A City Made for Biking
f) Chapter 10 Recommendations

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