
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 10. 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 Three Who Died 18. Air Pollution Bicycle Education 19. Schools 20. Public Education Appendices |
Chapter 17:
Accidents a) Perceptions and Reality c) Cyclist/Pedestrian Accidents d) Motor Vehicle Collisions e) Helmet Laws f) Chapter 17 Recommendations Table 17: Collisions and Fatalities in NYC Traffic Accidents
Accident StatisticsOfficial City statistics on traffic accidents provide telling information about risks to cyclists and risks from cyclists. For the full year 1992, there were 298 recorded collisions in New York City between cyclists and pedestrians. Two of these resulted in fatal injuries to the pedestrian. The frequency of collisions between motor vehicles and bicycles was an order of magnitude higher 3,520 accidents and 17 fatalities (see Table 17). In the same year, 1992, there were 13,599 collisions between pedestrians and motor vehicles in New York City. 294 pedestrians were killed in these accidents, including approximately 15 fatalities on sidewalks and other off-road areas. In other words, pedestrians were almost 50 times more likely to be struck by a motor vehicle than by a bicycle, and more than a hundred times more likely to be killed. Indeed, pedestrian deaths from cars running amok off-road in just one year roughly equal pedestrian deaths from all bicyclists in the entire 1980s. Granted, cars far outnumber bikes. But pedestrians (and the press) would be wise to examine more closely the real danger on the city streets: the huge volume, high speeds and crushing weight of automobile traffic. a) Perceptions and Reality c) Cyclist/Pedestrian Accidents d) Motor Vehicle Collisions e) Helmet Laws f) Chapter 17 Recommendations Table 17: Collisions and Fatalities in NYC Traffic Accidents |
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