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Bangkok plans cycling lanes to ease congestion in key districts


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Posted
8 minutes ago, madone said:

Tell me where do you cycle? 

 

I bet you don't.

 

Seems to me that the ones most vociferous about cycling in Thailand haven't been on a bike in years.

 

Meanwhile, avid cyclists in civilized countries like Canada, the US, UK, and Australia report increasing hostility and actual malicious and dangerous behavior against them. 

Check out any cycling forum for confirmation. 

 

Re seeing behind you" these days you can even buy bike radar that tells you exactly where the cars behind you are, how far away, and how fast they are moving. I personally think it's stupid, if I'm going to get hit from behind, I'm <deleted> anyways.   

Just like in car, I check over my shoulder regularly, but more importantly, I hold my line and ride predictably. No swerving, no weaving. 

Unlike western drivers, Thais are very familiar with sharing the road with two-wheeled vehicles, 

Logic and intuition make me inclined to disagree

Posted (edited)
12 minutes ago, mdr224 said:

Logic and intuition make me inclined to disagree

 

sure they do. all you lack is firsthand knowledge from experience

Stay safe on that sofa, my old mucker. perhaps you should stick with discussing the adventures of trump 

Edited by madone
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Posted
5 minutes ago, Digitalbanana said:

No one is going to cycle anywhere to get to a place unless there is a secure place to keep the bicycle to avoid it being stolen,

 Funny you mention that. bicycles are far safer here than anywhere I have ever lived. I don't think twice about leaving my bike out front of foodland or Villa while i nip in to do some shopping, and every office building has abundant, often guarded motorcycle parking 

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Posted
8 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

Did my morning 25Km earlier today, same as every day it's not raining.

I usually cycle up to Wat Doi Tairn (MaeJo) an back, very rarely I cycle to Mae Kuang Dam and back. Almost no traffic on the rural roads, except for a herd of cows or buffaloes.

Here's a baby strolling past my bike a week or so back.

 

 

IMG_20241019_084527.jpg

 

nice

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Posted

Hard to get a Thai to walk 100 meters to 7/11 without taking a taxi.


Highly unlikely the lanes will result in a bicycle  commuting surge.

 

More likely a dedicated motorbike/street food cart lane 

 

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Posted
2 minutes ago, G_Money said:

Hard to get a Thai to walk 100 meters to 7/11 without taking a taxi.


Highly unlikely the lanes will result in a bicycle  commuting surge.

 

More likely a dedicated motorbike/street food cart lane 

 

 head out to the skylane any old day in the late afternoon and see the hundreds of this of all ages exercising.  I also see commuters every day, far more this on the road than foreigners, 

its an if you build it they will come thing,  but it doesn't happen overnight 

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Posted
3 minutes ago, G_Money said:

Hard to get a Thai to walk 100 meters to 7/11 without taking a taxi.


Highly unlikely the lanes will result in a bicycle  commuting surge.

 

More likely a dedicated motorbike/street food cart lane 

 

Yet, another guess and Thai put-down........................:coffee1:

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Posted
2 hours ago, webfact said:

Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) and the Thailand Walking and Cycling Institute Foundation (TWCIF) are set to introduce a walking and cycling lane project in four heavily congested areas.

 

They did this in London and it made the congestion greater than ever. Ever since, London traffic now moves at a slower pace than Bangkok traffic. Anyway, who's going to ride a bike to/from work in the tropical heat or monsoon rains.

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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, madone said:

 Funny you mention that. bicycles are far safer here than anywhere I have ever lived. I don't think twice about leaving my bike out front of foodland or Villa while i nip in to do some shopping, and every office building has abundant, often guarded motorcycle parking 

 

Plus, if their target demographic is "last mile" commuters, nobody steals a clapped out commuter bike with a lock.  They may steal high end recreational bikes, but I never lost one leaving them for hours at a time cabled to a tree or signpost in the bowels of BKK.  My philosophy was that if I was afraid to use it, may as well not have it.  But I was always pleasantly surprised...

 

Edited by impulse
Posted
3 hours ago, webfact said:

The capital’s bustling streets may soon see a transformation as the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) and the Thailand Walking and Cycling Institute Foundation (TWCIF) are set to introduce a walking and cycling lane project in four heavily congested areas. A feasibility study for this initiative is scheduled to conclude next month, setting the stage for a city-wide shift in transportation infrastructure.

Looks like death row... motorcycles will use them for sure

Posted (edited)
30 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

Plus, if their target demographic is "last mile" commuters, nobody steals a clapped out commuter bike with a lock.  They may steal high end recreational bikes, but I never lost one leaving them for hours at a time cabled to a tree or signpost in the bowels of BKK.  My philosophy was that if I was afraid to use it, may as well not have it.  But I was always pleasantly surprised...

 

 

The point is that, even if they steal high-end bikes, there is nowhere to sell them and they are so recognizable they can't really be used. The community that buys and sell these bikes is so tight, they inevitably get recognized.  I have seen facebook messenger groups go vigliante on folks posting stolen bikes here.  The giveaway is the seller knows nothing about the 3,000 dollar bike the are flogging.  

a low-end bike is much more likely to get nicked because it doesn't stand out.  

Edited by madone
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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, soi3eddie said:

 

They did this in London and it made the congestion greater than ever. Ever since, London traffic now moves at a slower pace than Bangkok traffic. Anyway, who's going to ride a bike to/from work in the tropical heat or monsoon rains.

 

and it is this parroting of the pro-car mythology that is causing tensions between cyclists and drivers making UK and other Western cities dangerous for bikes.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/bike-blog/2021/dec/13/how-a-myth-about-london-bike-lanes-and-congestion-took-flight  

 

https://theconversation.com/cycle-lanes-blamed-for-urban-congestion-heres-the-reality-173388

https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/fact-check-are-cycle-lanes-really-making-traffic-worse-in-london/

Edited by madone
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Posted

Bangkok plans cycling lanes to ease congestion in key districts 

 

If they work as well as the Zebra crossings there are going to be Many Death people  about . One can't expect  Most Thai drivers to stay off the Bike lane just because the lane is for Bikes.  😇

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Posted
3 hours ago, madone said:

Tell me where do you cycle? 

 

I bet you don't.

 

Seems to me that the ones most vociferous against cycling in Thailand haven't been on a bike in years.

 

Meanwhile, avid cyclists in civilized countries like Canada, the US, UK, and Australia report increasing hostility and actual malicious and dangerous behavior against them. 

Check out any cycling forum for confirmation. 

 

Re seeing behind you" these days you can even buy bike radar that tells you exactly where the cars behind you are, how far away, and how fast they are moving. I personally think it's stupid, if I'm going to get hit from behind, I'm <deleted> anyways.   

Just like in car, I check over my shoulder regularly, but more importantly, I hold my line and ride predictably. No swerving, no weaving. 

Unlike western drivers, Thais are very familiar with sharing the road with two-wheeled vehicles, 

I've biked hundred thousands kilometers in my life, but I would never ride a bicycle here.  Very dangerous.

 

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Posted
2 hours ago, madone said:

 

The point is that, even if they steal high-end bikes, there is nowhere to sell them and they are so recognizable they can't really be used. The community that buys and sell these bikes is so tight, they inevitably get recognized.  I have seen facebook messenger groups go vigliante on folks posting stolen bikes here.  The giveaway is the seller knows nothing about the 3,000 dollar bike the are flogging.  

a low-end bike is much more likely to get nicked because it doesn't stand out.  

 

Good point...

 

Posted (edited)
20 hours ago, KireB said:

I've biked hundred thousands kilometers in my life, but I would never ride a bicycle here.  Very dangerous.

 

 

I was waiting for you or someone like you.  What an utter load of twaddle,  you have no idea what you are talking about because you have never even tried  riding here.

if you had biked even a fraction of the distance you claim, you would understand that the roads here are not nearly as dangerous for cyclists as you make out. 

let's be honest here,  when was the last time you were out on a bike logging those hundreds of thousands of kilometers?  When was the last time you went 100km in a single ride? 

utter <deleted>.  the walter mitty of the cycle world -- but not in Thailand, too dangerous. 


 

Edited by madone
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