Why Cities Are Tearing Out Bike Lanes (And What to Do About It)

Posted on

The future of bike lane infrastructure is not in a good place at the moment.

In a recent interview with the New York Post, the President criticized New York City’s network of bike lanes, saying:

They should get rid of the bike lanes and the sidewalks in the middle of the street. They’re so bad. They’re dangerous. These [electric] bikes go at 20 miles an hour. They’re whacking people.

, the vast majority of bike lanes are working as intended: connecting communities traveling by bike, on foot, and even in a car. The trouble is that most people don’t believe it.

The bike lanes being taken out

Though the results are infrequently commensurate with bike lane advocacy efforts, groups like PeopleforBikes tout a net improvement in bike network connectivity across the U.S. But any amount of change will come with pushback.

Here comes the pushback.

.’ Passed in November 2024, the bill aimed to give the province the power over cities to pull out bike lanes as well as require municipalities to receive provincial permission before removing vehicle lanes to add a bike lane.

in the city and replace them with roughly 100 car parking spots. In return is a bike boulevard on a nearby street. A bike boulevard, more often than not, is code for a street with sharrows painted on the ground and no dedicated division between cars and cyclists, and that’s what’s happening here.

Estimates say replacing the original parking will cost over $600,000 to install, with the new bike boulevard an additional $300,000. Both will take roughly a year to complete.

Bay Area advocate Mike Swire put together a montage of folks who depend on the bike lane which illustrates exactly what’s being taken out:

slowly being torn out for car parking previously, and they’re continuing course slowly but surely.

that “Bikers need to be protected from the traffic, and they need to do that on bike paths that are recreational and not try to compete with people going to work and school.”

All of this is dangerous, simply because of how challenging it is for any community to advocate for swapping car parking for bike lanes. Once car parking is in, it is nearly impossible to remove. People don’t want to remove an amenity they already have, and if you’ve been to any city council meeting, you’ll know just how much people value their car parking.

Why cities remove bike lanes

I don’t have a full data analysis here as to why North American cities are starting to remove bike lanes, and if you do, by all means, drop a comment below. What I do have is a whole bunch of experience trying to advocate for bike lanes to folks who are at best ambivalent about people biking around their cities. I see three key reasons why cities remove bike lanes.

Reason 1: Outspoken pushback

The most obvious reason is due to pushback, which itself comes in all forms. There might be public backlash from drivers who feel that a bike lane imposing on space they’re accustomed to causes traffic congestion, while the bike lane itself is comparatively empty.

It’s not that cycling is so left of field that it’s impossible to imagine. Rather, it’s that getting around in a car is so normal that cycling feels weird, even with its helpful boost in mode share from Covid.

And when that pushback comes, there’s only so many folks who can fight. Not all cyclists come from marginalized communities, but marginalized communities are more likely to walk or roll their destinations than anyone else. While more folks drive to their destinations than bike, an outsized proportion of folks with the time to go to city council meetings are almost always wealthier and less likely to bike or walk. That leaves commuting by bike less likely to be advocated for by folks who haven’t already advocated for those bike lanes before.

The squeaky wheel gets the grease, and when it comes to opposing bike lanes, that squeaky wheel gets louder than almost anything else.

Reason 2: Lack of commitment

, it takes a whole lot of investment in a dedicated bike network.

Cyclists who feel comfortable riding with car traffic are generally unbothered by having to ride beside cars, even on wider, faster, and more heavily trafficked streets. But as we’ve seen in one of the few cities to truly invest in a bike network, Cambridge, Massachusetts, you only get non-cyclists to commute by bike by ensuring the entire trip feels safe.

That safety isn’t just painted bike lanes. And it’s certainly not a sharrow and a bike boulevard as San Mateo, California proposes replacing its lanes with. Rather, it comes from commitment that goes farther than just that one bike lane.

went as far as to mandate protected bike lanes. The results speak for themselves: more cyclists on the road at all times, more kids on bikes, and accidents between cars and bikes cut by half.

Bottom line, cities need to invest in a connected, safe, and easy-to-navigate network that truly connects common destinations. Until that happens, you’re going to continue to see empty bike lanes and only the most dedicated cyclists willing to spar side by side with two-ton cars.

Reason 3: Human nature

We’re human. I love being human, but our fascination with negativity really hurts us here.

We’ll share with the world how hard it is to find parking any chance we get because we know we’ll find a captive audience ready to get riled up themselves. Rarely will we mention how easy it is to find bike parking, much less simply walk to a destination. More often than not, that brings a skewed perception of how difficult driving in a city can be, much less parking in a city.

of how bike lanes benefit everyone, in case you’re curious.

What can we do? Stay the course

One of my favorite quotes comes from the former Commissioner of the NYC Department of Transportation, Janette Sadik-Khan, who said, “The status quo is a hell of a drug.”

Sadik-Khan got blowback of all kinds when she oversaw the city’s rollout of bike lanes in the early to mid-2000s. “There aren’t enough cyclists for my business to warrant installing bike lanes!” many would argue.

And now? The network of bike lanes in New York City is so effective and has increased ridership so much that people are taking notice.

If there’s anything we’ve learned over the last few years, it’s that data rarely convinces people of anything; it only cements someone’s beliefs. What works is persistence and coalition. Cities might be in a mad dash to tear out bike lanes, but if they were put in before from sheer effort and advocacy, they can be maintained and even built upon. We challenged the status quo before, and we can do it again.

Leave a Reply

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