Cities for People: Murcia
14:58
Жыл бұрын
The Language of Traffic Safety
33:22
3 жыл бұрын
3 Myths of Cycling Debunked!
32:34
3 жыл бұрын
The Big Street Reclamation in France
53:33
Пікірлер
@MilesJacobs90
@MilesJacobs90 Ай бұрын
As a Dutch person who wrote his thesis on Copenhagen's bicycle infrastructure, i recognize all the points made in this video. Copenhagen has some cool high-profile projects but the overall design and coherence was lacking. For example like you showed, the snake bridge is very nice looking, but ends in a 90 degree turn on slick-when-wet pavement. Not a great design when people come barreling down that bridge slope. The rule-following difference with the Netherlands struck me also! And in absence of rules, weird things start happening in denmark - with no parking racks present people just plopped bikes down willy nilly, while in the netherlands people will on an empty square often create somewhat orderly lines of parked bikes because they have internalized a bike logic instead of relying on enforcement. Also the engineered chaos in the netherlands (bidirectional lanes etc) creates more skilled riders - never in my life have i been bumped into from behind while waiting at a traffic light in the netherlands, whereas this happened to me twice in 6 months in denmark. Some stuff they did well was the bike zones at the front of traffic lights, green waves for cyclists etc. What i would wish for denmark is that they standardize form and make of infrastructure, such as the dutch red asphalt and slanted curb bounds. And they focus their means on high average level instead of flashy projects, although those served their purpose in city branding and legitimizing bicycles as something serious and even 'city chique' in copenhagen. Could write for hours about this stuff XD
@exchangAscribe
@exchangAscribe Ай бұрын
how do the bollards know when to retract for a delivery vehicle?
@Gert-DK
@Gert-DK 2 ай бұрын
Don't know how you will get your bike out?? I have been biking all my life (I am 63), it has never been a problem. Wake up! Have you ever been biking? You forgot a transportation method. The Regional trains, they are actually very important. Each 20 min to Sweden, North to Helsingør, South to Næstved and Vest to Kalundborg. These trains transport thousands of people each day, to and from school and work, they are actually a cornerstone in Copenhagen transport. It is the same train that brings you from the airport to Copenhagen Central Station in no time.
@trainrover
@trainrover 3 ай бұрын
🌬brrrRrr🌬 creepy how fuckingly captured by cleptoparasitcally corporate barons Holland has become..!
@spencer5028
@spencer5028 3 ай бұрын
Who voted for diversity?
@nynkeham3126
@nynkeham3126 3 ай бұрын
What is the name of the app that was mentioned?
@thewildbunchASD
@thewildbunchASD 4 ай бұрын
As a bike loving Dutch person, i think the rental of bikes and cars is against the purpose of public transport especially in a place where everyone has a bike. The real solution is like in Denmark, make space for many bikes on short distances but also invest in trains like the German regional trains where there is a lot of space for bikes. Just i have more and more problems with my Omnium bike as its a two wheeled cargo bike without box but its not allowed in any tains while its by far the best way of transportation on long and short distance but i would like to take take trains too when i want to move further away. I will an can never not rent a bike from NS. I did however use Greenwheels for work, an NS partner. And that solution is cheaper than the actual train!!! Who is biting who in the ass?
@KHValby
@KHValby 4 ай бұрын
Friend. Familiarize yourself with our bicycle rules before you choose to criticize them. When a bus stops and there is no space in between the sidewalk and the Bus, for passengers to stand on or off, cyclists have to stop. Allowing passengers on and off. Locals know this. Been to North America several times. Don't think that you get to attack our Biking Culture. You basically have none, corresponding to Europe. The problem with cycling tourists in Copenhagen is that they don't want to spend five minutes learning the traffic code and rules. Copenhagen is NOT the place to learn Cycling, if you don't know how to👎! Sorry Dude, but we expect Tourist to know the rules, before getting on a bike and setting out into the City! Otherwise they risk getting yelled at, getting injured/killed or fined. Pedestrians first. Cyclists second, motorists third! If I get hit on my way into or out of a Bus, by a Cyclist. He/she is gonna have a really bad day! Just saying...😌 Cycling for us is not for fun. its a practical way of getting back and forth. The city of CPH knows there's a problem with Cycle "parking" and planning for better options in the future. Apart from that. CPH can date its History back to the 8th century. There are limits to what we´re gonna and can do to our City, to please Cyclist 😊 ! I know your not a bad person, trashing my City.., but you do lack context! 😊! 5-7 different "bike-share" options here: Most of them being E-bikes. An electric scooter here requires a helmet, which the companies won't pay for.., so.... ! Context dude.., Context! How to bike in CPH: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fmWVfJ1_oLRriaM
@emrahy.849
@emrahy.849 4 ай бұрын
thank you ..more videos tutorials pls 🎯
@mavadelo
@mavadelo 4 ай бұрын
The funny thing to me is that this is a reason for a North American to study and make a presentation about while for the average Dutch person it is a "well... duh-uh" thing. The traveltime app/site was fun though. Basically got the results I expected to see with different times.
@kailahmann1823
@kailahmann1823 4 ай бұрын
Multimodal transit is an extremely powerful, but far to often overlooked option - even for relatively rural areas (as a Bike+Bus version): Serving every tiny village with frequent transit isn't feasible, as it would create more bus-traffic than it removes car-traffic. But serving frequent service to the towns (those big enough for their own infrastructure…) usually about every 5-10 km puts almost every spot into biking distance from one of these.
@freudsigmund72
@freudsigmund72 4 ай бұрын
would have been nice if that isochrone app was made public... otherwise the info is quite useless
@joymerluzzi
@joymerluzzi 4 ай бұрын
Ven a Perú por favor, aquí estamos en nada, somos el reto!
@Weaver271
@Weaver271 4 ай бұрын
This way of thinking about the Dutch Bike-Train network should be presented to all of those holding public office in the Netherlands! No one in the Netherlands is really aware of this since is so commonplace. Prime example is the Dutch Liberal Party VVD proposing the Dutch Railsways (NS) should cancel it's OV-Fiets Rental Bike program since it isn't profitable!
@autohmae
@autohmae 4 ай бұрын
It's silly not to consider trains and bikes, the reduced cost of not having to build more streets and lanes and greatly reduced maintenance is an easy win.
@DanielBrotherston
@DanielBrotherston 4 ай бұрын
Lol...do they ever consider how profitable the free car parking next to our local station is I wonder?
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 5 ай бұрын
Having trees on a bridge may not be the brightest idea, from the trees point of view? And though wide, it may be full during rush-hours?
@Alby_Torino
@Alby_Torino 6 ай бұрын
Interestingly now Jason's YT channel has almost 1.8 M subscribers
@user-fj9wg6hn8w
@user-fj9wg6hn8w 6 ай бұрын
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:02 🚲 *Sustainable Mobility Challenges* - Cities globally face urgent and complex challenges in transitioning to sustainable mobility. - Technical difficulties in designing cycling infrastructure, competing capital budgets, and skepticism from the public are common obstacles. - The video emphasizes the multifaceted struggle cities undergo on technical, social, and political levels. 03:27 🗺️ *Policy Learning and Transfer Overview* - Policy learning and transfer have been traditional concepts since the 90s, emerging from fields like geography and political science. - Policy tourism, a more recent idea, involves firsthand experiences through study visits, tours, and excursions. - Policy learning is conceptual and dynamic, while policy transfer follows a linear framework; however, their precise roles in transportation research remain unclear. 06:19 🔄 *Beyond Policy Transfer: Dynamic Interaction* - Study visits involve dynamic interactions, rich experiences, and communication beyond merely adopting or stealing policies. - The failure of policy implementation doesn't necessarily mean a lack of learning; larger institutional barriers, such as organizational cultures and bureaucracies, play a role. - Learning mechanisms from other fields, like relationships, communication, and leadership, contribute to building capacity for good governance structures. Made with HARPA AI
@AlekSander-yx8fv
@AlekSander-yx8fv 7 ай бұрын
Car transport is freedom! Trzaskowski is dictator
@thefox4944
@thefox4944 4 ай бұрын
XD Like Warsaw wasn't already a car centric hellhole
@AlekSander-yx8fv
@AlekSander-yx8fv 4 ай бұрын
@@thefox4944 you are commie :(
@lolololol7573
@lolololol7573 7 ай бұрын
Okay I gotta say... the shots from 4:08 are gorgeous. I have often seen skylines in movies from many American cities or other cities who have skyscapers and all that. But I have never seen the Netherlands highlighted like this. And I have to agree, it looks fantastic! These are great shots!
@pcongre
@pcongre 7 ай бұрын
Llévenlos a Tokio también para que vean la otra parte del puzle! ; )
@inesalag
@inesalag 7 ай бұрын
Armamos un curso en Tokio? 😊
@UrbanCyclingInstitute
@UrbanCyclingInstitute 8 ай бұрын
FULL VIDEO: Why is Lisbon stuck with 100-year-old trams? on Urban Mobility Explained KZbin channel kzbin.info/www/bejne/sGXFmnt6hK6IhJYfeature=shared
@davewentelteef
@davewentelteef 8 ай бұрын
Can't click the link
@UrbanCyclingInstitute
@UrbanCyclingInstitute 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for heads up, KZbin disabled links back in August :( @@davewentelteef
@carmenl163
@carmenl163 9 ай бұрын
Why film this video while standing in the middle of the bike path? It may be a shared street, but it does have designated areas. You're lucky you weren't in Amsterdam where people would have told you to get the f out of there.
@user-vr4dr4mv3y
@user-vr4dr4mv3y 9 ай бұрын
Well, it's polish standard!
@simonrancourt7834
@simonrancourt7834 9 ай бұрын
The Montréal Métro is not heated.
@joenuts5167
@joenuts5167 9 ай бұрын
Zamdaaam sucks lol
@misiek_xp4886
@misiek_xp4886 9 ай бұрын
Bro, Warsaw bus and trams frequency is wonderful compared to other cities in Poland. I'm from ~80k people town and I will never speak against Warsaw public trasport.
@dr.oobleck2317
@dr.oobleck2317 9 ай бұрын
Great video! Can i ask whats the song that starts at 10:20 ?
@janekmazur5985
@janekmazur5985 9 ай бұрын
Warsaw also has tram lines, and light train system (suburbia train). Calling tram network expensive is random, it is actually cheaper than bus. Tram has many lines, so that could ramp the cost.
@misza.k
@misza.k 10 ай бұрын
Your film does not cover the whole of Warsaw, just the very centre - the most representative and developed part of the city. Outside this zone, the city looks very different in many ways.
@WienerVL
@WienerVL 10 ай бұрын
Vorgartenstrasse is my living place! I only have a 70 meters walk to the u-bahn!
@AlfAnt1715
@AlfAnt1715 10 ай бұрын
Used to live in Utrecht... I think I want to move back, it seems lovely. I'm afraid of the housing prices though...
@innocentbystander8346
@innocentbystander8346 10 ай бұрын
Complete BS written by somebody who doesn't know Warsaw, Poland or Europe. Ruzzian propaganda sponsored by putler himself
@mareksicinski449
@mareksicinski449 10 ай бұрын
As people said, something not mentioned here is that there's also local train lines running through the city and available with the same unified tickets; SKM, Koleje Mazowieckie and WKD (to a smaller extent)
@hobog
@hobog 10 ай бұрын
7:45 clearly shows trams on their own right of way, maybe waiting to traverse one of multiple T and traffic circle tram intersections
@mareksicinski3726
@mareksicinski3726 10 ай бұрын
they have priority in right of way but not at mixed intersections
@barroerabonatarda7045
@barroerabonatarda7045 10 ай бұрын
I visited the city about a month after this video aired, and I gotta give props to the public transport for seemngly being on time and very clean all the time. It is also true that the city overall seems to be kept in a very clean condition (including the outer suburbs I've been to), and coming from a city as noisy as Barcelona, I really really appreciate how quiet it is in comparison.
@Dive1962
@Dive1962 11 ай бұрын
The thing is, we're not huge fans of all these rental bikes and scooters. Most people find them annoying because the are usualy parked haphazardly on sidewalks. And let's face it, most Dutch people own at least one bike.
@AlmostBipedal
@AlmostBipedal 11 ай бұрын
What happened to chapter 3?
@henkoosterink8744
@henkoosterink8744 11 ай бұрын
Lack of scooter options....be happy!
@maxnewts
@maxnewts 11 ай бұрын
Crazy to watch this now he has over a Million subscribers
@Quendiful
@Quendiful 11 ай бұрын
Bravo! Thank you Marco te Brommelstroet and UCI! I ask my son why are we trying so hard to become less human? Why not strive to become more human? I like being human. I believe becoming more mechanized and motorized benefits the few at the expense of the many. Becoming more human benefits the many at the expense of...hmmm...no one. Everyone wins!
@henkschmitz6768
@henkschmitz6768 11 ай бұрын
Hi Jason, the Olympic Games were in Amsterdam in 1928. (You can still buy a nice poster of it nowadays.)
@willpotter22
@willpotter22 11 ай бұрын
The Netherlands is better rest assured my family will be there soon😊
@1981Frederick
@1981Frederick 11 ай бұрын
Old port neigborhood shouldn't be talked about for urban design, there is no citizen there, and montrealer rarely evet go there, it is a tourist attraction, restaurant, hotel and airbnb spot. I mean, it s worth yalking about it if you want to talk about toursit destination, but not if you are to talk about urban planing, and no point ever as there everbeen a neigborhood discussion about zoning a district like old port.
@kailahmann1823
@kailahmann1823 11 ай бұрын
Americans "you only live 10 kilometers from the center" Europeans "that sounds rural…"
@jeberle1
@jeberle1 Жыл бұрын
Wow, great talk, many rabbit holes to dive into. All that and some solid uku + vocal work? Impressive. Resources mentioned in slides: • TED: How language shapes the way we think | Lera Boroditsky • Travelling together alone and alone together: mobility and potential exposure to diversity, Applied Mobilities, Marco te Brömmelstroet, et al. (2017)
@ramiro041
@ramiro041 Жыл бұрын
It's funny te hear you say jason's channel "really took off" at a mere 16k subs
@nickcalcperc
@nickcalcperc Жыл бұрын
I love those double-decker racks. Are the top racks hydronic or spring-loaded to help with the weight of the bike?
@AngelinaAndBrad
@AngelinaAndBrad Жыл бұрын
Well edited professional video...nice
@gytan2221
@gytan2221 Жыл бұрын
That’s the town I moved to recently! Really love it here!
@drerri
@drerri 8 ай бұрын
Ive lived there most of my life - great city now! It really was a Dutch "ghetto" in the 90s and early 2000s.
@spikedpsycho2383
@spikedpsycho2383 Жыл бұрын
Load of shit. Far from being frivolous, nearly all of our auto travel has important goals: work, education, shopping, education, recreation, and so forth. Thus mobility has contributed to greater worker productivity, better housing, and lower-cost consumer goods. In 1929, Americans spent nearly 40 percent of their personal incomes on food, clothing, and household furnishings. By 2018, it was just 11 percent. This is partly because incomes rose, but it’s also because the costs of shipping declined. Since 1900, the cost of moving manufactured goods has fallen by 90 percent, due largely to motor trucking. The decline in the share of incomes dedicated to these necessities allowed more money to be spent on recreation, education, communications, health care, and other amenities. Both Civil/Womens rights movements depended on cars to succeed. Mobility = Freedom Freedom = Opportunities Opportunity = Greater degree of advancement More importantly allowed Working class move OUT of untenable, filthy, substandard urban living conditions