• About
  • Archive
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Dana Blankenhorn
  • Home
  • About Dana
  • Posts
  • Contact Dana
  • Archive
  • A-clue.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Dana
  • Posts
  • Contact Dana
  • Archive
  • A-clue.com
No Result
View All Result
Dana Blankenhorn
No Result
View All Result
Home A-Clue

The Chief Enemy of E-Bikes

Cul de Sacs created the "War on Cars"

by Dana Blankenhorn
February 24, 2025
in A-Clue, Bicycling, Current Affairs, economy, energy, environment, futurism, Health, investment, law, Lifestyle, Netherlands 2025, Personal, politics, regulation, The War Against Oil, Travel
0
0
SHARES
25
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

As the number of people with e-bikes continues to rise, and as more people use them as transportation rather than for recreation, it’s clear we have one big enemy.

It’s not Trump and it’s not the Congress. I’m talking about something much closer to home.

It’s the cul de sac.

Cul de sacs have been a standard part of urban design for almost 80 years, since the end of World War II. They’re the product of an age when land uses – homes, stores, workplaces – were kept strictly separate. They’re a product of the automotive age.

This is a feature, not a bug. As Wikipedia notes, “Dead ends are added to roads in urban planning designs to limit traffic in residential areas.” Cul de sacs eliminate “cut through traffic,” directing all drivers to the main road. This forces cyclists who want to leave their cul de sacs onto 5-lane streets, next to cars going past at 60 mph and more. It’s where the resentment of bikes by cars, and the deaths of cyclists at the hands of cars, comes from.

Cul de sacs were designed when everyone used a car for everything. Cars are noisy, and they’re dangerous. It’s valuable not to have them racing down your street, and cul de sacs prevent that. But cul de sacs turn public spaces, the roads that are our transit system, into private spaces, which only residents can use. In the 21st century, this is very bad public policy.

The Ride to Lidl

I created the linked ride a few months ago, in preparation for my trip to the Netherlands next month.

When I made it, I was thinking that the ride might seem difficult to a Netherlander. It’s a full 3 kilometers and takes 9 minutes. There are hills, and I don’t even use the motor for the first half of the ride. In Maarssen, the flat Utrecht suburb I’ll be staying, this is a 1 kilometer ride and is said to take 4 minutes.

But I realized recently that’s not the problem. That’s because Kirkwood, the Atlanta neighborhood where I live, was designed early in the 1900s as a grid, with streets that connect with each other. Over time, people driving through moved to faster roads around its perimeter. As a result, you can bike from my home to Lidl as fast as you can drive there, because you’re taking a direct route.

This is important because it’s unique. If I ride outside Kirkwood, to the east or the north or the south, I quickly enter the world of cul de sacs. A ride like this becomes impossible, if you care about safety.

The Enemy

Cul de sacs are popular.

When suburban developers move into urban places, they bring cul de sacs. That is, if a developer sees a big piece of urban land and decides to build residences on it, there will be only one entrance and exit, directed toward the widest street.

For e-transport to work, we need to segregate it from the main highways. We need to take direct routes, bike-width paths, limiting their use to vehicles going under 15-20 miles per hour.

Bikes and e-bikes are quiet. If the paths are designed correctly, there should be no fear of cars or thieves traveling through pristine suburbs. You’ll see families, kids and moms, maybe a few dads and students heading for offices and college labs.

But I guarantee that if you propose cutting through a cul de sac, anywhere in America, you’re going to face overwhelming opposition. People are going to scream about the taking of property, but they’re really going to be worrying about people from outside cutting through their neighborhoods and (somehow) committing crimes. Never mind that you can’t carry much on a bike. Never mind the commonsense security, like cameras you can put on the path to identify riders.

Yet this is a fight worth having, because until we give everyone what I have on my Trip to Lidl, e-bikes won’t reach the mass market, and we’ll be locked in our rolling living rooms forever.

Tags: bicyclinge-bikesurban design
Previous Post

The Apple Exception

Next Post

AI Still Needs People

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

Next Post
AI Still Needs People

AI Still Needs People

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Post

The Coming Labor War

The Insanity of Wealth

May 7, 2025
Tachtig Jaar Van Vrede en Vrijheid

Tachtig Jaar Van Vrede en Vrijheid

May 5, 2025
Make America Dutch Again

Make America Dutch Again

April 30, 2025
Bikes and Trains

Opa Fiets is Depressed

April 29, 2025
Subscribe to our mailing list to receives daily updates direct to your inbox!


Archives

Categories

Recent Comments

  • Dana Blankenhorn on The Death of Video
  • danablank on The Problem of the Moment (Is Not the Problem of the Moment)
  • cipit88 on The Problem of the Moment (Is Not the Problem of the Moment)
  • danablank on What I Learned on my European Vacation
  • danablank on Boomer Roomers

I'm Dana Blankenhorn. I have covered the Internet as a reporter since 1983. I've been a professional business reporter since 1978, and a writer all my life.

  • Italian Trulli

Browse by Category

Newsletter


Powered by FeedBlitz
  • About
  • Archive
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 Dana Blankenhorn - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Dana
  • Posts
  • Contact Dana
  • Archive
  • A-clue.com

© 2023 Dana Blankenhorn - All Rights Reserved