<span style="font-style: italic">On a related note, I heard yesterday that our Mayor is considering setting up "bike stations" where people who work in the main downtown area could pick up a bike and ride it for free and drop it off at any number of bike drop off points around the downtown area. Driving a car around downtown (which happily I don't have to do often) is a pain due to one-way traffic flows and limited parking. Thus, to me this idea makes a lot of sense as long as they have some mechanisms in place to preclude the bikes from being stolen. I've seen this used in Europe and it seemed to work well. I think it could work well in our downtown area as well - as a matter or practical convenience.
Basil [/quote]</span>
Basil, I hafta tell you a funny (or, not so funny!) story about the "drop off" bicycles! Here in Charlottesville ("America's #1 city by "Cities Ranked and Rated", 2007), our esteemed City Council funded a bike drop off project similar to the one you mention, above. The bikes were all painted a bright yellow color to ID them as the City bikes. Great idea on paper, but . . .
ALL the bikes were stolen within about two weeks!!!! :shocked:
Those ugly yellow bikes turned up all over town for the next few months, stripped, beaten, broken.
Here, we've put a lot of effort into making City streets safer for cyclists, but there's still a long way to go to get us up to European standards for this concept. European Cities do this efficiently. For example, I've seen a great system in most of the major cities over there. The bikes are placed in a locking device, then you have to rent the bike by credit card: if it's not returned, or it's in bad condition, it's charged to your card! EXCELLENT IDEA! Make the rider responsible!
Our council, against the good advice of others who knew better, wanted to provide them "free" of charge. BAD idea!
Again, our tax dollars at work!
