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The Netherlands is known as a cyclists paradise.
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Its safety levels, one of the best in the world,
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are in staggering contrast with the US,
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where you're around 20 times more likely to be injured while riding a bike.
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In the Dutch capital nearly half the working population
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commutes daily on over 500 km of dedicated cycle paths.
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But the city only narrowly avoided
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being taken over by cars.
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Here's how Amsterdam put the brakes on cars
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to give bikes a chance.
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Following the Second World War, the mobility and
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affordability of cars started changing people's lives.
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Neighbourhoods around the world were being flattened
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to make way for busy highways.
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“Chicago is moving a city”
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“New York striving to keep abreast
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of the ceaseless teeming traffic”
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Amsterdam wasn't going to be left behind.
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Streets, once considered public
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space in the Netherlands, were changing.
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Their new function was purely for traffic.
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The number of bikes in Amsterdam plummeted.
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Between 1960 and 1970 the number of cars in the country quadrupled,
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jamming the traditionally narrow streets.
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Engineers and city planners wanted to modernise
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Amsterdam to make it more car-friendly.
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They proposed ideas like; filling in the famous canals with concrete,
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levelling historic neighbourhoods, and building expressways and monorails.
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This is what Amsterdam would have looked like in 2000
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if the Das brothers had realised their futuristic vision.
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Unsurprisingly, there was opposition.
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Anarchist group Provo came up with the world's first bike and car sharing schemes.
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They didn't take off at the time, but the sentiment to keep Amsterdam light on cars
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was shared.
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Dutch road fatalities peaked in 1972.
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In response, protest groups like Stop De Kindermoord, or “Stop Murdering Children"
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were organising blockades of areas with high accident rates to make their point.
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Then, in 1973, the oil crisis sent fuel prices skyward, prompting the Dutch government
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to ban motor vehicles for one day a week.
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“Reaction here to the Sunday motoring ban has been mixed.
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The unions and the hoteliers are angry and annoyed.”
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But the sales of bicycles started to rise.
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Pressure groups jumped at the opportunity to show citizens how Amsterdam could look
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without cars.
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The government took notice and in 1978 introduced the Traffic Circulation Plan
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to make Amsterdam less attractive to drivers.
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It called for the closure of certain streets to traffic, reduction in car parking spaces
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and gave priority to cyclists and pedestrians.
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Amsterdam started embracing 'Woonerf' -
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or 'living streets' - a concept that was already successful
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in reducing traffic casualties outside of the capital.
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The specially designed zones are landscaped to slow drivers down.
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Without sidewalks, drivers share the space with cyclists and pedestrians and have to
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move at walking pace.
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Making Amsterdam more bike-friendly was really about making the city less friendly for cars.
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Now, almost a quarter of the Dutch population cycles every day,
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with 75% of children cycling to secondary school.
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The number of cyclists on the road also makes it safer -
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research shows a correlation between higher numbers of bikes and lower casualties among cyclists.
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If Amsterdam's story is anything to go by - there is not only safety but also power
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in numbers.
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Just as important as cycling lanes and car controls,
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is getting people on bikes in the first place.