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> The cost of bike lanes isn't too bad. Unlike a car road it doesn't require a lot of maintenance.

Tell that to cyclists used to navigating mandatory bike infrastructure full of terribly broken up surface. If car lanes were that quality, people would put the authorities under permanent siege with torches and pitchforks, for refusing to maintain roads.

"Oh, but that road is fine, few spots where you have to step out of the car to push it". For some reason, people responsible for bike infrastructure (outside .nl or Copenhagen) tend to think that it's ok to slow down to walking speed or dismount, on main routes. Imagine similar things required from drivers.



> Tell that to cyclists used to navigating mandatory bike infrastructure full of terribly broken up surface.

We’ve had paved, off-road bike lanes where I live since the 80s.

They’re not mandatory but they are highly used and to my knowledge have required almost no maintenance in all that time.

There’s no scaring or resurfacing visible.

The wear and tear on tarmac is directly related to the weight of the vehicles that use it.

The benefits of bike lanes are massive compared to the cost.


> The wear and tear on tarmac is directly related to the weight of the vehicles that use it.

From empirical studies, damage to the road is proportional to the fourth power of axle weight. A bike with rider may weigh 200 pounds, where a passenger car weighs around 4000 pounds. That 20x difference in weight results in a 80,000x difference in damage to the road.

(That’s not even getting into semi trucks, which are around 40 tons fully loaded. Split along 5 axles rather than 2, that’s 9x the axle load of a passenger car, leading to 6,500x the damage to the road relative to a passenger car, or 520 million times that of a bike.)

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_power_law


Yeah, and that model is just wrong unless wear from axle weight is the dominant lifetime limiter. There are many other lifetime limiters (like tree roots pushing up from below), and when road engineers plug in bicycle axle weight into their usual formulas you get designs that barley last a season - even when they aren't used at all.


I did say it was low maintenance, not that it was maintenance free.




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