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Showing posts from January, 2009

Mikael's Bike Goes to Africa

Some of you may recall that Copenhagenize/ Copenhagen Cycle Chic were the proud recipients of one of Yahoo!'s Purple Pedal bikes last year. The bikes are equipped with a mobile phone with a camera, which is run off a solar panelled box on the back. It takes a photo every minute when active and instantly transports it back to a Flickr website and the Purple Pedals website, complete with geotag. When the bike is stationary for three minutes, it goes to 'sleep' and will awake once again when it is put into motion. All quite flash. All went well for a good while. I rode it around, for example, when the Portland crew came to Copenhagen on a study trip last fall. Here's a photo series taken by the bike's camera . After that there were some technical difficulties involving... well... technical stuff. I'm pleased to say that the bike is up and running again and, after a week in Copenhagen, the bike is now in Tanzania! My friends at Baisikeli, the development org that

Countryside Bicycle Lanes and City Roundabouts

I am so totally crap at covering the bicycle infrastructure in provincial Denmark quite simply because I rarely get out there. The opportunity arose a week ago when we motored out to the country in our car share car , to spend some time with all the kids and parents in my son's school class. Just as in Holland and many regions of other European countries, there are bike lanes pretty much everywhere. They vary in style and placement, depending on the amount of traffic they get. If you're really out in the boondocks, you may be stuck for separated lanes, but between most towns there are either lanes on each side of the road or, like in the photo above, a two-lane bike lane running parallel to the road. This bike lane runs between two towns. One with a population of 4000 and the other, 15,000. It is a part of the regional and national bike lane network. Roughly 10,000 kilometres in all. The respective county is responsible for upkeep of the lanes in its area. Such lanes are primar

Hunting and Bicycles

Thanks to BlackSeaFleet for the link to this great shot. A hunter cycling home with his quarry. It's from the strange Fail blog , who seem to think this is strange, but it gets a Copenhagenize thumbs up for innovation and balls.

Ice Ice Baby

A little spot of winterliciousness from Austria, as photographed by ' Anuwintschalek ' on Flickr. Perhaps her Triobike is parked nearby. With the record cold snap chilling most of Europe , it's nice to see how cyclists across the Continent either just get on with it or find unique ways to adapt. Nice to see he is riding a normal bike and I love the mirrors. You never know who's skating up behind you.

Copenhagen Reserved Parking

Typical Copenhagen. Someone needs to reserve this stretch of parking spots. For whatever reason, be it the arrival of a moving van or a temporary container. Who knows. They used the traditional tape and orange pylons but this is often hardly a deterrent for motorists. I've tried this before and all too often a motorist will disregard your attempt to reserve the spot. Finding parking is difficult in the centre of Copenhagen. It's frightfully expensive and the City removes 2-3% of all parking street-level parking each year, using the space for bicycle infrastructure or public spaces in general, be it trees, benches, what have you. The solution above is simple. Mark off the space you need to reserve and then use some of those bicycles leaning against a building nearby, laying them down ever so nice. A motorist may nudge a pylon out of the way but they will hardly hop out of their car to move a bicycle. Case closed. Problem solved. Copenhagen style.

Metro Bicycle Parking

All the underground stations on the new Copenhagen Metro have bike parking rooms. I never use them myself but the few times I've peeked inside... ... there is always loads of room. There is a bar on each wall, but bikes are just leanding on their kickstands. The Metro is brilliant but it doesn't go many places outside of cycle range - the red local trains transport you farther out into the suburbs - so there isn't that much use for the parking rooms I suppose. The Metro was voted as the World's Best a couple of years ago and is quite cool. The URL is nice, too. www.m.dk .