Hometransalt.org
Bicycle Blueprint
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
Freight Cycles
16. Gov't Cycling


Reducing Risks
17. Accidents
Three Who Died
18. Air Pollution


Bicycle Education
19. Schools
20. Public Education


Appendices

      Chapter 15:
Freight Cycles
a) Efficient Deliveries
b) Working Models in NYC
c) Additional Uses for Freight Cycles
 Hauling Household Gear | Freight and Asian Pedal Power
e) Chapter 15 Recommendations
Figure 15: Center for Appropriate Transport

Hauling Household Gear

Bicycles or tricycles fitted with simple boxes or freight compartments can also pull their weight for individuals doing day-to-day errands and shopping. As unlikely as it seems, a bicycle can easily bear up under heavy loads of groceries, recyclables, furniture or almost anything else a city dweller needs to move; all it takes is a minute or two of adjusting to the altered center of gravity. Indeed, in early 1992 a “cycle convoy” of seven cargo bicycles and bikes with pull-trailers moved the entire Transportation Alternatives office, including file cabinets, desks and computers, from SoHo to the East Village.

George Bliss has designed bikes that can accommodate a shopping or laundry cart with a simple hook. He also envisions renting out his freight cycles, like inexpensive, nonmotorized U-Hauls, on an hourly or daily basis. Ken Hughes of Mobility Resources in Santa Fe, NM, builds narrow, single-wheeled trailers that are ideal for apartment living; the trailer can be easily detached, enabling it to fit in a small elevator or be carried up stairs. Vander Tuin has sold a small freight bike fitted with a rack and trailer to a farmer near Eugene, Ore., who uses it for all his transportation needs, including composting and shopping.

Freight and Asian Pedal Power

Domestic bike sales [in China] in 1987 reached 35 million — surpassing total worldwide automobile sales. Elsewhere in Asia, bicycles often make up two-thirds of the vehicles on city streets during rush hour. Many Asian urban transit systems are enhanced by pedal-powered “paratransit,” consisting of three-wheeled vehicles for hire — variously called rickshaws, trishaws, pedicabs and becaks — in which a driver transports one or more passengers. These resourceful adaptations of the bicycle do much the same work automobiles do elsewhere. Cycle rickshaws are the taxis of Asia, and heavy-duty tricycles, hauling up to half-ton loads, are its light trucks. In Bangladesh, trishaws alone transport more tonnage than all motor vehicles combined.”

from Worldwatch Paper 90, The Bicycle: Vehicle for a Small Planet, by Marcia D. Lowe, Sept. 1989.




a) Efficient Deliveries
b) Working Models in NYC
c) Additional Uses for Freight Cycles
 Hauling Household Gear | Freight and Asian Pedal Power
e) Chapter 15 Recommendations
Figure 15: Center for Appropriate Transport

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