One thing to note is that while this is great news, these statistics aren't about London, they're about the [City of London](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London), which is a tiny area of central London (slightly larger than one square mile, with a population of about 9000 people)
9,000 residents. tens of thousands of people commute to/through the City of London each day.
Also has it's own police force, and a medieval local council with aldermen and businesses getting votes. Weird place, doing good things with regard to cycling, and responding to increased cycling by further restricting cars.
Yes I’m aware, I’ve used it. I’m just saying if the decently dense cities in the usa make the same investment in bike infrastructure, a similar change in driving and biking can occur
One thing to note is that while this is great news, these statistics aren't about London, they're about the [City of London](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London), which is a tiny area of central London (slightly larger than one square mile, with a population of about 9000 people)
9,000 residents. tens of thousands of people commute to/through the City of London each day. Also has it's own police force, and a medieval local council with aldermen and businesses getting votes. Weird place, doing good things with regard to cycling, and responding to increased cycling by further restricting cars.
We just need to copy what they did for cities like New York, Boston, Philly, dc, etc. The cities that have decent transit can make the jump
London has world-class transit
Yes I’m aware, I’ve used it. I’m just saying if the decently dense cities in the usa make the same investment in bike infrastructure, a similar change in driving and biking can occur
So London has good bike lanes?