Bike to Work Week 2012: May 28 – June 3

With Parking Meters Extinct, Cyclists Hunt for Lock-Up Spots

When the City of Victoria first started talking about removing parking meters in favour of pay-by-stall street parking, Coun. John Luton knew there would be serious problems for cyclists.

Eliminating meter heads meant the posts could no longer be used as unofficial, but secure, spots to lock up bikes. Hundreds of bike parking spots suddenly disappeared.

Luton hopes a new bicycle parking strategy, to be presented to Victoria council in October, will treat the issue as more than just an afterthought.

"Walk around where there’s not enough bike parking and there will be bikes locked to trash cans and that hampers your public works operations," said Luton, a cycling advocate. "They’ll be locked to benches. They’ll be locked to places where they’ll slide down onto the sidewalk and create problems for pedestrians."

But the solution isn’t just found in haphazardly slapping up decorative pieces of bent iron or retrofitting parking meter posts into hitching posts.

Although convenient, the parking meters were never great for bike parking, Luton said. The main problem is that they are too close to the curb, meaning that bikes attached to them are often hit by cars or car doors.

The new strategy was developed by Urban Systems consultants with input from city staff and Luton. Two years in the making, it offers design guidelines for both on- and off-street facilities.

It’s not just a question of requiring new developments to include a certain number of bike parking stalls, but taking into account what’s needed and where and how it’s provided, Luton said. For example, no one wants to use a bike lockup in a distant, poorly lit corner of an underground parkade.

In 1999, the city adopted guidelines for the installation of bike racks on city streets. Six years later, it added requirements for off-street bike parking in new developments.

But those requirements can be circumvented when, for example, a bike rack is pushed up against a building, eliminating half the parking the rack is designed for, Luton said

"We haven’t before had an element of bicycle parking bylaws that say you have to meet the actual number of spaces rather than the theoretical number of spaces of the rack," Luton said.

"If you were to do that with car parking, you wouldn’t get your occupancy permit."

Bike parking facilities range from a simple inverted U-rack to facilities such as bike corrals, covered shelters, bike compounds, bike rooms or even a fully serviced bike station, with parking, shower facilities, change rooms and even an information centre and coffee shop.

If the strategy is adopted by council, the city could take steps such as requiring installation of facilities with showers and change rooms in new buildings. For developers who provide more bicycle parking than they have to, it could also reduce motor vehicle parking requirements.

Luton thinks some funding for a bike parking reserve could come from developers looking for reductions in required off-street car parking.

"Vehicle parking can make or break a new residential building… . You can do developments without the absolute maximum number of parking spaces and you make it more affordable."

bcleverley@timescolonist.com

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2011 Kelowna and Central Okanagan Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 261
  • Total Cyclists 1384
  • New Cyclists 312
  • Total KMS Cycled 61008.87

2011 Victoria Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 615
  • Total Cyclists 5712
  • New Cyclists 877
  • Total KMS Cycled 266174.14

2011 North Okanagan Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 59
  • Total Cyclists 346
  • New Cyclists 116
  • Total KMS Cycled 13374.45

2011 Oceanside Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 11
  • Total Cyclists 119
  • New Cyclists 16
  • Total KMS Cycled 1541.6

2011 Sunshine Coast Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 45
  • Total Cyclists 172
  • New Cyclists 28
  • Total KMS Cycled 7513.289

2011 Revelstoke Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 49
  • Total Cyclists 390
  • New Cyclists 90
  • Total KMS Cycled 12376.89

2011 Prince Rupert Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 1
  • Total Cyclists 6
  • New Cyclists 1
  • Total KMS Cycled 45

2011 Prince George Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 76
  • Total Cyclists 609
  • New Cyclists 98
  • Total KMS Cycled 17725.95

2011 Powell River Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 27
  • Total Cyclists 148
  • New Cyclists 53
  • Total KMS Cycled 5719.52

2011 Penticton Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 58
  • Total Cyclists 260
  • New Cyclists 30
  • Total KMS Cycled 9798.16

2011 Nanaimo Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 53
  • Total Cyclists 176
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  • Total KMS Cycled 7917.59

2011 Kootenays Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

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  • Total Cyclists 14
  • New Cyclists N/A
  • Total KMS Cycled 2097.8

2011 Kamloops Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 73
  • Total Cyclists 301
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  • Total KMS Cycled 12696.74

2011 Fraser Valley Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 158
  • Total Cyclists 460
  • New Cyclists 149
  • Total KMS Cycled 19614.88

2011 Cowichan Valley Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 27
  • Total Cyclists 154
  • New Cyclists 46
  • Total KMS Cycled 6125.5

2011 Comox Valley Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 120
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  • New Cyclists 175
  • Total KMS Cycled 24564.1

2011 Campbell River Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 111
  • Total Cyclists 428
  • New Cyclists 117
  • Total KMS Cycled 15421.78

2011 BC Communities Bike to Work Week

May 30th – June 5th

  • Registered Teams 52
  • Total Cyclists 122
  • New Cyclists 30
  • Total KMS Cycled 3830.04
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