The Future of Mobility Has Two Wheels: Copenhagen’s Bike-Friendly Architecture


Lille Langebro Cycle and Pedestrian Bridge / WilkinsonEyre. Image © Rasmus Hjortshøj - COAST

Lille Langebro Cycle and Pedestrian Bridge / WilkinsonEyre. Image © Rasmus Hjortshøj – COAST

Ambitious technologists have claimed for decades that self-driving cars are the future. Yet, looking at recent years, the biggest revolution has come from vehicles on two wheels, not four. Fueled by the pandemic, increased oil prices, climate change and the desire for healthier lifestyles, we are now living in the midst of a bicycle renaissance. But to understand how we got here, it is crucial to look back. When the automobile became more widespread in the early 1900s, it quickly became a symbol of progress along with all it entailed: speed, privatisation and segregation. Adopting a car-centric approach, urban planners had to reorganise entire cities to separate traffic. Cars took over public spaces that used to host dynamic city life and parking lots, highways and gas stations became common landscapes. Pedestrians that once ruled the streets were herded into sidewalks and children relegated to fenced playgrounds. Ironically, cities were being designed for cars (not humans).

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