Your cycling fallacy is…
“If we put in cycling infrastructure or pedestrianise a road, shops will get less business”
The response
Cycling infrastructure and traffic-free areas do not restrict access to shops – they can actually make streets with shops on them nicer places to visit, increasing footfall and overall demand.
Many studies – from the Netherlands in the 1970s, to big US cities in the 2010s – have found that installing cycle infrastructure does not have a negative effect on the income of businesses, and in most cases has a positive effect.
It's a popular myth that people who arrive by car spend more. People who get to the shops by cycling may spend less per visit, but they will visit more often, and they will spend more money overall. And being able to access a shop easily without a motor vehicle means that more frequent trips involving smaller ‘baskets’ become more convenient.
The headline message is: well-designed streets that make cycling and walking attractive are good for business. And in any case, cycling infrastructure won't stop people driving to shops, or parking near them and walking a short distance. The goal is not to prevent all driving, but to give people safe, sensible choices.
Indoor cycle parking in a shopping mall in the Netherlands
Source: A View From The Cycle Path(Copyright, used with permission)
Further reading
More proof that bike lanes boost business
from Tree Hugger
Not-Cyclists
from Bikeyface
-
How to Measure the Economic Effect of Livable Streets
from Streetsblog
Protected Bike Lane Statistics Archives
from People for Bikes
Seattle Transit Blog: Business on NE 65th dramatically increased after bike lane was installed
from Seattle Bike Blog
Proof that bike lanes are great for business
from Salon
-
Shopping by bike: Best friend of your city centre
from European Cyclists’ Federation
Bike lanes aren't just safer for cyclists – they're good for business too
from FastCoExist
The Complete Business Case for Converting Street Parking Into Bike Lanes
from CityLab
Salt Lake City street removes parking, adds bike lanes and sales go up
from Streets Blog USA
Shop Blocked
from Bikeyface
-
Active Transportation Fallacies Part 3: "Bike Lanes Are Bad for Businesses"
— HUB Cycling
Deutsch
Studie: Radfahrer sind bessere Kunden
from Mittelbayerische Zeitung
Radler sind die besseren Kunden
from Radfahren in Stuttgart
Italiano
Are we missing a link to a great article on this subject? Click here to let us know!