Free bike hire Brisbane City Council

vovo
Posts: 81
Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2008 5:59 pm

Postby vovo » Fri May 09, 2008 11:29 am

beauyboy wrote:An update with Hire project.
Couriermail.com.au
Mayor pedals city bike scheme
Ursula Heger
May 06, 2008 04:00pm
BRISBANE could see "bikes for hire" scattered about the inner city by the middle of next year under a new city council plan backed by Lord Mayor Campbell Newman.

Lord Mayor Campbell Newman said today that the idea, which could see up to 2000 bicycles available for public use in an area stretching from Newstead to the University of
Queensland, would be similar to systems in European cities such as Paris and Barcelona.
The plan, which allows people to borrow a bicycle to travel a short distance and return it to any registered bike station, would cut down on pollution and congestion on Brisbane streets.
‘‘In the future, I see bikes playing a much greater role in shorter-distance travel,’’ Newman
said. ‘‘We are helping to encourage and speed that culture change by providing the infrastructure.
‘‘What I expect is that people will see how easy it is to get around the city by bike and will naturally use the car less for quick trips down to the shops and other short journeys.’’
He said the 150 bike-hire stations will be positioned about 300m apart across the suburbs,
but not including CBD neighbour Springhill because of its hilly character.
Bicycle Queensland manager Ben Wilson welcomed the move, but said some parts of Brisbane’s bikeway system needed improvement to cope with the increase in cyclists.
‘‘The northside is suffering from construction of the Northern Busway, which will close the hospital-side Bowen Bridge Rd for nearly two years. It is already a narrow road and most of the
other side is taken up with the tunnel works.’’
The idea has been successful in other cities, such as Lyon, where almost 150,000 car trips
were replaced by ‘‘bike for hire’’ rides in the first six months of operation.
A council spokeswoman said the stations would not compete with tourist bicycle hire operations, which were designed for longer hire.
surely this is a means to an end, people are not going to increase cycling until facilities are upgraded (or oil runs out) but if they install this "vote buying" promise of bikes for hire, they will need to "educate people" as well as the average punter now lobbying government for upgraded facilities as they want to use the new iniative.

Maybe they are doing things the wrong way round but, hey at least they are doing something.

MountGower

Postby MountGower » Fri May 09, 2008 4:50 pm

The problem that is not so apparent is that when oil runs out, people won't be cycling. Bikes are made from oil. So is your computer. No more oil means no more life as we know it. Forget about walking too far until your feet toughen up either - your shoes are made from oil.

vovo
Posts: 81
Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2008 5:59 pm

Postby vovo » Fri May 09, 2008 11:25 pm

correct me if i am wrong but we can make synthetic oils, just not cost effective.

Also vehicle and power are the biggest users of crude oil, we will not burn every last drop, but we will reach a point where fuel stations no longer exist. this is essentially when oil has run out, unless you own your own oil field.

But i digress...

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