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We Come Before You Do

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Bicycle-related, believe it or not. A condom campaign against AIDS/HIV from Switzerland.
"We come before you do"

Ah, yes. The bicycle is back.

Thanks to Paul from Vienna Cycle Chic for the link.

Copenhagenize Challenges...

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Svajerløb 2010 - Copenhagenize Push
Copenhagenize Consulting has challenged three other 'players' on the urban cycling scene in Denmark to an internal battle at this year's Svajerløbet 2011 - Danish Cargo Bike Championships. We hereby challenge these people.... and these people.... and these people. The latter is Copenhagen's Bicycle Office.

The challenge:
- We all participate in a heat of the Team Relay discipline.
- The bosses have to take part and the three others have to be employees.
- Choose your own cargo bike.
- Go hard or go home

So far, the Copenhagen Bicycle Office has responded to Copenhagenize's challenge.
So far, the other two have not responded.

Let the games begin.

Participants can challenge others to personal battles through the Svajerløbet 2011 website here: http://www.dmforladcykler.dk/TipEnVen.php

Scary Season in Denmark - How Not to Promote Cycling

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Here in Denmark, the summer's silly season is replaced by scary season. As the air gradually cools and the leaves fade to yellow, the people who produce "safety" campaigns start firing up their stoves to cook up a new batch of car-centric fear gulasch.

The new kid on the block is the Vejdirektoratet - Danish Road Directorate with their VejKryds.dk campaign that hopes to raise awareness about right-turn collisions. We blogged about this campaign back in May when one of our readers - by chance - was invited to a feedback session hosted by Megafon.dk aimed at testing the campaign on a panel of citizens.
You can read about the preview here: Fear Campaign Sneak Preview.
Fear Campaign
The campaign is now on the streets. Compared to the original proposal it is clear that the Road Directorate listened - slightly - to the feedback panel and toned down the campaign a bit. It's still corny as hell with a "rhyme" theme. The main tagline is "Du tror du bli'r set, men pludselig er det sket" or "You think you've been seen but suddenly it happens." Cue photo of a bicycle on the street and... a shoe.

The rhyme is a step up from some of the original proposals featuring such classics as "Hun tog chancen, han skreg efter ambulancen" or "She took the chance, he screamed for an ambulance". Whatever the geeky rhyme, it's still... STILL... the vulnerable traffic users who get pointed at accusingly by these people.
The on-street campaign is clearly going after cyclists. The handful of people who might actually click onto the website will discover that the Road Directorate grudgingly provides some "advice" for motorists and lorry drivers. Cyclists are given nine tips to follow and motorists are provided with three. Lorry drivers are given six tips plus three links to a bit of extra info.

Interestingly, municipalities are provided with a page, too, with infrastructural information to follow - if they haven't already - about moving stop lines for vehicles back five metres (at a cost of about $1000, it says) and with increased safety effects. By pulling back the stop line for vehicles five metres accidents involving vulnerable traffic users are reduced by 35% and accidents involving "late or slow pedestrians" are reduced by 15%.

That, of course, is mentioned nowhere on the on-street campaign. No, that might be rational and clever.

Readers are encouraged to invent some nifty rhymes and enter the competition.
For example, "Færre biler i byen, flere mennesker på cyklen" - "Fewer cars in the city, more people on bicycles"
"Sæt denne kampagne i bero, reducerer biltrafikken din ho" - "Stop this campaign, reduce car traffic you ho". (rhymes in Danish, anyway) Feel free to add your rhymes, if not to the website, then here in the comments.

Basically, what the Danish Road Directorate is saying with this million kroner + campaign is: "We are utterly incapable of (or uninterested in) working towards reducing the number of motor vehicles in our cities". It would have been cheaper to just slap that text on their website in a nice font and then use the extra money on building infrastructure or workshops for municipalities.

For the sake of comparison, here is an article comparing a Danish bike lights campaign with a Dutch one.


So, next up is a campaign from Byens Trafikråd - or The City's Traffic Council and they drew "Pedestrians" out of the hat. (The only other name in the hat was Cyclists). They are reusing a campaign they've had for a couple of years ridiculing pedestrians for thinking that the urban landscape was created for freedom of mobility and for their cheeky inconveniencing of motor traffic. Last year they called it "Ser du det hele?" or "Are you seeing everything?", this year they just changed the name to "Kryds med forsigtighed" or "Cross with Care"

They are focused on the 13-19 year old demographic and were out on the news with scare tactics for their campaign. Even the police's usual pundit suspect in Copenhagen, Mogens Knudsen cast his views into the fray supporting the scare tactics. The same Mogens Knudsen that I debated with last year at the national cycling conference. Surprise, surprise.

Once again, there is no talk of reducing speed limits in Copenhagen and implementing 30 km/h zones like in over 75 other European cities. No visible desire to improve life in Copenhagen by reducing car traffic - which apart from being dangerous in accidents also kills ten times more people than in the accidents themselves.

On the news a label was slapped on pedestrians in connection with this campaign. "Rødgængere" - reworking of "fodgængere", meaning "pedestrians". Replacing the word "fod/foot" with "rød/red". Pedestrians who cross against the light. We know that other terms, like "jaywalking" were inventions of the car industry. "Rødgængere" is merely a label used by car-centric organisations.

Again, the read-between-the-lines message is clear. "We are hopelessly inadequate at promoting cycling positively so we just choose the easy route. Cars rule." Followed by a shrug as they head down to the canteen for lunch.

Here you can see how the Dutch promote traffic safety in the briliant Drive With Your Heart campaign. And, while we're at it, check out how the Hungarians do it.

In other news from the Fear Factory is this recent article in Politiken - a Danish newspaper. It's all about "Send the Children Safely on their Way on Two Wheels". Take one look at the graphic. The red, international standard warning triangle with a kid on a bike in the middle.

Can you figure out where we're headed? Thought so.When the illustrator recieved the gig I'm sure there was no ulterior motive in producing the danger!danger! theme. But this is incredibly representative of the current perception of cycling in Denmark. The intense helmet promotion from the Danish Road Safety "Council" (Rodet for Sikker Panik) and the Danish Cyclists' Federation over the past couple of years has completely and radically changed the perception of cycling in the population.

The article is the usual stuff about teaching kids to ride a bike and determining when they're ready to head out alone. According to the Danish traffic laws a child can ride unaccompanied from the age of six. But these kids don't read Politiken, the parents do. And that whopping graphic is what they register. Yet another negative symbol of cycling in a long, long line of negative symbols.

I could go on. Oh, wait, I'm going to...
One of the links in the aforementioned newspaper article was to a campaign by the Danish Cyclists Federation called "Alle Børn Cykler" or "All Children Cycle". It intends to promote cycling among children and school classes can participate, earning points for riding to school and... of course... points for wearing a helmet. This is, of course, yet another sign of the safety ideology inherent in the Culture of Fear infilitrating our daily lives. Even the Swedes haven't learned the lesson and now certain people are copying the bad example.

Our colleague Thomas Krag - urban mobility consultent and bicycle guru - was wondering about this and he puts it rather succinctly:

"All Children Cycle. With a helmet. This is the message in this years Alle Børn Cykler campaign, where the helmet has been awarded the yellow jersey. In second place is the bicycle. And after that the almost completely obscured human faces covered by helmets.

It made me think about Jörg Bechmann's PhD. Bechmann is German, studied sociology in Denmark and was until recently the head of the European Transport Safety Council. His PhD is referred to here, in Danish: Automobilisation as mobility paradigm - reflexions on cars, motorists and their spatial temporalities.


Bechmann analysed the covers of FDM's (the Danish automobile association) membership magazine, and found that through the years the cover changed from showing people and cars to showing just the cars and their technical qualities.

Now bicycle communication is apparently going through a similar dehumanisation. With the thought-provoking difference that the bicycle helmet, instead of the bicycle, is taking over the images.

Isn't it a little strange? Are there any obvious reasons why it should be so?"


Think about it. The dehumanisation of the bicycle. After 125 years.

For comparison, here's a page from the Dutch Fietsersbond's website about their Fietsschool - Bicycle School.

The last example of the crisis that Danish bicycle culture is in is clearly exhibited in an article in The Guardian last week - "Copenhagen's novel problem - too many cyclists". In it a person representing Visit Denmark - the national tourist board and a representative of the Danish Cyclists Federation bang on their jungle drums about how intimidating cycling is in Copenhagen. According to THEM, the two individuals. It's hardly credible that they desperately try to project their own personal perception of "intimidating" onto a larger population.

Why on earth ask the opinion of two - we're assuming - insecure cyclists? They've clearly never cycled anywhere else. Try Amsterdam. Enjoyable but chaotic. Imagine... this is Visit Denmark advertising Danish cycling culture. Do they talk about the risk of alcoholism when talking about Carlsberg? About a friend of hers who drank too much, got alcohol posioning and had to be put in a taxi? Or about how LEGO is simply too dangerous and despite the positive safety record, a man tells you that things COULD GET DANGEROUS in the future if LEGO keeps producing such small bits of plastic?

Amazingly, (or not) The Onion has already covered this New Tourism Marketing angle from Visit Denmark: The Onion: Denmark Introduces Harrowing New Tourism Ads

Denmark Introduces Harrowing New Tourism Ads Directed By Lars Von Trier


If you've read our previous posts about the book "Fighting Traffic - The Dawn of the Motor Age in the American City" by Peter D. Norton - Fighting Traffic and The Anti-Automobile Age - and what we can learn from it you'll know that the battle to limit the negative effects car traffic has on our cities is nothing new. Here in the age of demotorization the tide is changing. Some are ahead of the curve, others are hopelessly, frustratingly behind.

The Culture of Fear is alive and well and cycling - from a marketing perspective - is apparently the new smoking in Denmark

Bicycle Club Names 1890s

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The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation
Cartoon from 1892. "The Holy Antonius' Last and Greatest Temptation". The Cycling Girl.

Reading a brilliant book from 1947 about the dawn of bicycle culture in Copenhagen and Denmark. Chock full of goodies. Here is an incomplete list of some of the many bicycle clubs active in Copenhagen in and around 1890-1897. There were scores more than these. Loving some of the names.

Trækfuglene (Migratory Birds)
Dansk Bicycle Club
Københavns Cycle Club (Copenhagen's Cycle Club)
Østerbros Cycle Club (Østerbro is a neighbourhood)
Seniorklubben
Ordinary Cycle Clubben
Frederiksberg Cycle Club
Aftenfrokostforeningen (Evening Lunch Association)
The Old Boys
Record Klubben
Nordiske Afholdsforeningers Bicycle Club (Nordic Temperance Associations Bicycle Club)
Københavns Kvadrille Klub (Copenhagen's Quadrille Club)
Kvindecycleklubben (The Women's Cycle Club)
Who changed their name to:
Damecycleklubben (The Ladies Cycle Club)
Selskabelig-Cyclist Forening (Sociable Cyclist Association)
Arbejdernes Bicycle Club (The Workers' Bicycle Club)
Cyclisternes selskabelige Forening (The Cyclists' Sociable Association)
Ringens Venner (Friends of the Ring - nickname for the wheel)
Dansk Cycle Ring (Danish Cycle Ring)
Amateur Cycle Clubben
The Old Tourists
Lægernes Cycleforening (The Doctors' Cycle Association)
Typografernes Cycle-Club (The Typographers' Cycle Club)
Toldopsynets Cycleklub (The Customs Dept Cycle Club)
The Old Friends
Orlogsværftets Cycleklub (Naval Shipyard Cycle Club)
Stjerneklubben af 31. Maj 1897 (The Star Club of May 31, 1897)
Kometen (The Comet)
Ordenens broderlige Cycle Klub (The Order's Brotherly Cycle Club)
Privat Cycleclub (Private Cycle Club)

Bicycle Care Station by Statoil

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Statoil's Bicycle Care
Photo: Mads Odgaard
Norway's Statoil is a major oil company in Scandinavia and they have many petrol stations in Denmark. My friend Mads took these photos of a Statoil station in Copenhagen that has clearly accepted - dare one say embraced - the bicycle culture here in the City of Cyclists.

In no uncertain terms Statoil has reserved space for cyclists to fix, tune-up or pump their bicycles at this Bicycle Care station.

The sign, above, reads:

"Dear Cyclist,
You can care for your bicycle here. You can pump and wash your bicycle and, inside the shop, you're welcome to borrow a free bicycle care kit with oil, tire levers, allen keys, etc. 
Enjoy.
Statoil"

I simply don't know how to make that text any nicer.

Statoil's Bicycle Care
Photo: Mads Odgaard
In the centre of the bicycle pictogram is a rack that folds down so you can hang your bicycle on it while repairing, caring, whatever. An air hose is on the right and, on the left, a dispenser with paper towels and plastic gloves.
Statoil's Bicycle Care
Photo: Mads Odgaard
Here's the view of the station. The bicycle symbol is prominent and quite splendid.

That's all it takes. That section of wall was unused but now it is useful. A modest investment and, in a flash, this station is bicycle friendly. If the Citizen Cyclist also drops a few coins in the shop, that's good for business, too, but the important thing is symbolism. Especially near the centre of Copenhagen where bicycles outnumber cars.

Danish Bicycle History

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Montage of historical footage from Denmark. Bicycle related, duh.

Brilliantly Overdone

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Nice. However it could have been 2 minutes shorter and with lyrics that didn't refer to all the yadayada about the benefits of cycling and it would have been even more powerful.
Just slap on "Here Comes The Sun" by the Beatles and you'll say the same thing without force-feeding the eco-rhetoric down people's throats.

Beautiful graphics, though.

Win and Buy Cars in New Zealand!

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Thanks to Su Yin, loyal reader in New Zealand, for sending us this advert for a lottery. Poor guy on the left. Relegated to riding a bicycle but if he wins the lottery, he can have CARS!

Cool advert other than that little FAIL.

Is it just me or are most of these crappy examples of how to promote car culture, happily ignore the bull and 'car industry strikes back' coming out of Australasia?

Ljubljana

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Ljubljana Cycle Chic_6 (2)
I felt at home on my recent visit to Ljubljana, Slovenia. Arriving from Copenhagen in a city with 10% modal share for bicycles is always a pleasure. I was attending to three bits of business. Opening European Mobility Week at the Foreign Ministry with the Danish Ambassador and the Slovenian Foreign Minister, giving my Four Goals for Promoting Urban Cycling talk at the City Museum and opening the world premiere of my Monumental Motion exhibition.

A busy but thrilling and rewarding couple of days. Inbetween gigs I cycled around the city with my friend Janez, Ljubljana's Cycling Officer and some urban planning colleagues.
Ljubljana Cycle Chic_17 Ljubljana Bicycle Life_7 Ljubljana Bicycle Life_19
Ljubljana Cycle Chic_20
I was given a Bullitt to ride so I felt even more at home, although the Nihola would have done it, too. Thanks to Miha at Emil Hernandez for the loan.

The goal of the cycle ride around the city was to look at some problems in the bicycle infrastructure network and to see what we could do about it. With 10% modal share, I knew that there was decent infrastructure in place. We started in the city centre with some infrastructure that was... well... interesting.

Ljubljana Cycle Chic_24
We headed out to the near suburbs, towards a "problem intersection" that needed some Copenhagenizing. It was on the way out there that I looked down. And saw something quite lovely.

Ljubljana Bicycle Life_8
I speed up alongside Janez and asked him what the hell we were cycling on. It looked remarkably like a Copenhagen-style cycle track.
Ljubljana Cycle Chic_30

Oh yes, he assured me. It was. Then he told me a splendid story. Back in the late 60s/early 70s a team of urban planners travelled from Ljubljana to Copenhagen to study bicycle infrastructure. This was at the height of the Cold War - although the Iron Curtain as far as Slovenia/Yugoslavia was concerned was more of a dangly bead curtain, but hey. They studied infrastructure and went home and just built it. Copy/paste. Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V. They built 45 kilometres of these perfectly separated cycle tracks and THAT is where Ljubljana was launched onto it's journey as a bicycle-friendly city.

It boggles the mind that urban planners in other cities and countries don't do the same. Copy paste best practice from Denmark or the Netherlands. Save time. Save money. Save fixing the mistakes later. Amazingly, cities are still putting in bike lanes painted on the LEFT side of parked cars, instead of along the curb. As Jan Gehl says, the only function they have is protecting... the parked cars.

Ljubljana Bicycle Life_23
Here are some Citizen Cyclists heading home on a stretch of it in the early afternoon. Squint your eyes and you're heading out of Copenhagen along one of the motorways. Style Over Speed. The bicycle is quick and convenient and that lets you ride in style.

Amazing. Since then some of the cycle tracks have been removed and the city has been struggling with connecting the network. They've been at 10% for a few years, not least since independence. Slovenia also has higher car ownership rates than Germany. Urban planners started to think car as opposed to bike over the last decade.

But what a legacy. Cycle tracks since the early 1970's. With a bit of vision and dedication, the established mainstream bicycle culture in the city can easily move towards 15%-20%. If the right choices are taken.

A new bike share programme has been established this year, and is a whopping success.
Ljubljana Bicycle Life_10 (2)

A bike box (pleasingly on the stretch that featured the Monumental Motion exhibition) is in place
Ljubljana Cycle Chic_64
There is even a pre-green for bicycles at this intersection.

Ljubljana Bicycle Life_4 (2)
There are loads of bicycle traffic lights already, which is a brilliant sign.

Ljubljana Bicycle Life_18 Ljubljana Bicycle Life_16
Newer developments feature infrastructure bicycle infrastructure, as well.

Ljubljana Bicycle Life_9
There are still glitches along the way. Great bollards separating the motorised traffic from the bicycles, but then cyclists are forced to stop as cars swoop to the right unencumbered. A traffic light for the motor vehicles, forcing them to stop - since the the drivers will otherwise look left for cars as they merge, instead of at the cyclists on the right - and one for the bicycles and that problem is fixed.

In a number of spots bike lanes lead towards a bridge and then disappear, while cars speed along at 50 or 60 km/h. Cyclists I saw just rode on the sidewalk. As we know, the majority of cyclists been 'naughty' do so because of sub-standard (or total lack of) sensible infrastructure.

It was a pleasure to be in the city and meet so many like-minded people. I reminded them not only to look at the negatives - the problem spots - but to remember the positives. It's a city that is lightyears ahead because of visionary planning forty years ago. Capitalizing on the positives will only serve to speed the journey towards a more complete, more effective network of bicycle infrastructure. Constant focusing on the negatives in discussion with city planners and politicians will only end up sounding irritating. This city has so much going for it. Getting to the next level - with the right tailwind - will be easy.

Ljubljana Cycle Chic_77
Thanks to Janez, from the City of Ljubljana and everyone else for their fantastic hospitality.

No Hands

Ignoring The Bull - Illustrated

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Thanks to our reader, Aaron, for sending us the link to this photo. As he wrote in the email, "If you ever need a photo illustrating "Ignoring the Bull, here it is".

Indeed.

Perfectly illustrated. Fenced in, protected, backs turned to it. Classic Ignoring The Bull in Society's China Shop.

Bicycles to Visit the Queen

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So we got ourselves a new government in Denmark. When the government is formed, the tradition is that they pop down the palace to let the Queen know. She provides tea and biscuits. All very ceremonious. Here we see the leader of one of the coalition parties, Margrethe Vestager of the Radical Left (not very radical, not very left, but hey) arriving in style at Amalienborg Castle, followed by the other ministers from her party. Not a BMW/Audi/Mercedes in sight. Only elegant Velorbis bicycles for gentlemen and ladies alike. The bicycles are part of a large Velorbis bicycle fleet available for politicians to use for getting to and from meetings at various locations in central Copenhagen and are adorned with the logo of the Danish parliament.
And here is Manu Sareen. This is not the first time politicians have arrived by bicycle for this, but it's the first time one of them was riding a cargo bike. In this case a splendid yellow Bullitt. Here's an earlier post about him campaigning for election on the bike.




Here they are outside the Danish parliament, on their way to the palace.

We're not sure how things will pan out with this government, but we daresay things may be looking good.

Thanks to Gregers for the link.

Health & Safety Officials

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This sums up my opinion of HESO's rather nicely. Not to mention the Culture of Fear.

My Bike Was Stolen AGAIN

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Mikael.
Photo by Diego Franssens - from interview in Belgian magazine Knack.

Here we go again. Some of you may remember the fairytale ending the last time my Bullitt cargo bike got stolen, back in May 2011. What started with this blogpost ended happily with this one.

Last night, it happened all over again. I have just moved flats - last Saturday - and this real estate agency have not yet given me keys to the backyard, where there is a bike shed. It's a secure backyard, requiring a key to get in or out. (nor have they given me a key to the postbox, so if you've sent me a postcard, I haven't read it yet...)

In lieu of being able to park the Bullitt in the backyard, I parked it on the sidewalk outside the flat. It is a busy street, right next to a busy intersection and a bus stop. I bought an extra lock - super thick Amsterdam style - and both locks secured the bike to a metal railing. Not optimal, but hey.

This morning, the locks lay curled on the sidewalk like sleeping rattlesnakes and the bike was gone.

Bloody irritating.

So, if you live in Copenhagen and spot it, please let me know. Ring or send a text to (45)26 25 97 26

Last time it got stolen and returned was a dreamy experience. I'm not expecting to repeat that success but you never know. There are only 30 red Bullitts in Copenhagen and none of them have red side panels like mine. Here's the description.

- It's red
- Brooks saddle and Brooks handlebar grips.
- The red side panels are one of a kind.
- It has a foldable seat in the box.
- It's the only damn Bullitt with black brake cables and a white gear cable.
- On the cross bar there is a "Hold my bicycle while I kiss your girlfriend" Cycle Chic sticker.
- On the left side of the box there is an FC St. Pauli sticker (round) and a Copenhagenize sticker (round) as well as a Svajerløb 2011 sticker.
- On the right side of the box there is a Copenhagenize sticker (round) and some Svajerløb stickers.
- On the handlebar stem there is a Knog Skink bike light (white) - which doesn't work and stopped working shortly after starting to use it because a couple of rain drops got in it. Sheesh.
- On the back fender there are three Transporte Ativo stickers in three colours.
- The Bullitt logo on the sides - at the bottom - is in a yellowish colour, whereas many Red Bullitts have white lettering. This is quite an important detail in recognising it.

Football Transport
Thanks in advance for any help. Wouldn't it be wild to get it back twice?


Hvis du bor i KBH/FRB og ser cyklen send gerne en sms til 26259726.


Remember... when a bike is stolen a fairy dies.
http://www.copenhagenize.com/2011/05/my-bike-was-stolen.html

Bucharest Needs Help

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We recieved a cry for help in the Copenhagenize inbox today. Marian, from Bucharest, wrote simply, "Help us!"

And then included a link to this fantastic video filmed in the city. A review of the "completed" cycle tracks in the Romanian capital. Ish. Brilliant stuff from Optar.ro

Crappy bicycle infrastructure made by traffic planners who don't know the first thing about Best Practice, who don't ride bicycles for transport and who only look forward to the day when they can upgrade their automobile to a newer model is something that is well documented on the internet. What is happening in Bucharest, however, boggles the mind.

A Day's Messing

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Fantastic little film!

"A Day's Messing is a silent comedy shot on Super 8mm film in the style of Buster Keaton, George Melies and Charlie Chaplin. It follows a NYC bike messenger as he is derailed from delivering an urgent package by an alluring female cyclist. As he searches for her again on the streets of NYC, he falls into a rabbit hole of time, space and absurdity, until serendipity surprises them both. Written, directed by and starring a clown and mime, this film re-imagines the spirit and technique of classic slapstick and vaudevillian physical comedy for a contemporary audience. "

General Motors Strikes Back

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Addendum: Later in the day this post was written. After a bit of a Twitter storm, The Los Angeles Times reports that General Motors is withdrawing the bicycle portion of their campaign. Which is great news, although it's kind of like the rebels taking a minor city when Gaddafi stills controls Tripoli.

Thanks to the eagle eyes at the League of American Bicyclists, this General Motors campaign was spotted - and spanked accordingly. "Reality Sucks" is their campaign title. It offers discounts to college students who want to buy a car. This is another example of Copenhagenize's "Car Industry Strikes Back" series. Most instances of the car industry, or automobile insurance companies, are subtle and use imagery to underline their point that cycling is geeky, only for poor souls and can't compete with the sexed up car ownership world. This GM campaign spells it out, revealing the inner desires of the car industry faced with stiff and growing competition from bicycle traffic.

Stop Pedalling, Start Driving.

Yes. They're worried. Yes. They're desperately trying to cling on to a fast-changing market. No. They don't seem very capable of doing so.

It would be amusing if it wasn't so pathetic.

GM has a list of Environmental Principles on their website. This is prime material for The Daily Show.

As a responsible corporate citizen, General Motors is dedicated to protecting human health, natural resources and the global environment. This dedication reaches further than compliance with the law to encompass the integration of sound environmental practices into our business decisions.

We are committed to actions to restore and preserve the environment. (Meaning: We'll put tiny bandaids on the mass destruction we have caused over the past century in your cities and countryside. Oh, and the Great American Streetcar Scandal? No comment.)
We are committed to reducing waste and pollutants, conserving resources, and recycling materials at every stage of the product lifecycle. (Meaning: Because this will increase our profit margin)
We will continue to participate actively in educating the public regarding environmental conservation (Meaning: we'll do everything we can to manipulate people into staying in our cars and ridicule all other forms of transport).
We will continue to pursue vigorously the development and implementation of technologies for minimizing pollutant emissions. (Meaning: As long as it stills involves oil and we can still keep selling cars)
We will continue to work with all governmental entities for the development of technically sound and financially responsible environmental laws and regulations. (Meaning: We will spend outrageous amounts of money lobbying politicians to keep them on our side)


Be sure to read Bike League's piece on the GM campaign here.

Addendum: The next day after General Motors got caught in The Perfect Twitter Storm.
Giant bicycles produced this bicycle-friendly version of the ad.

Subversive Bicycle Photos: Singapore

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Our readers are getting stuck into their local archives since we started the Copenhagenize Subversive Bicycle Photos series. A secret gallery of historical photos showing the role of the bicycle in our cities around the world. In this latest installment our reader Tom has provided us with a bundle of subversive imagery from Singapore. As ever, please don't let this get out. You should view this page from a proxy server in Kazakhstan and remember to delete your cache when you're done. And whatever you do, DON'T peruse the previous galleries from other cities. Seriously. General Motors is probably tracking our movements. We know what they did to the streetcar culture in America and what they're trying to do to cycling from the previous post here on the blog.


1953. "Cyclists during the 'Safety First Week'". Link to archive.

1939. "Street scene at Battery Road, Singapore, featuring pedestrians and various modes of transport at the time: motor cars, trishaws, rickshaws and bicycles". Link to archive.

1971. "About 200 cyclists from various schools took part in a safe cycling rally by the National Safety First Council. Six girls from Changkat Changi Secondary School were among them". Link to archive.

1960. "The bicycle - an important transport form in the villages". Link to archive.

1946. "Different modes of transport in Singapore Town". Link to archive.

1977. "Gang of boys pose with bicycle in Johore Road side lane". Hairdo is fantastic. Link to archive.

At left: 1980. "A mask maker named Buankok sold his masks and artefacts all over Singapore on his three-wheeler". Link to archive. At right: 1976. "Telecoms worker cycling through the flood to send a telegram". Link to archive.

At left: 1946. "Young lady with a bicycle". Link to archive. At right: 1941: "Cyclists on an outing." Link to archive.

1938. "Group winners of the "Cycle Road Race"". Link to archive.

Zipcar Strikes Back

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Two days in a row we get to add new installments to Copenhagenize's The Car Industry Strikes Back series, showing how the bicycle is increasingly regarded as a threat to the market share. General Motors sailed into The Perfect Twitter Storm yesterday and today....

There is a car share company in the States called Zipcar. Car sharing is good. I use a car share programme here in Copenhagen - okay... only about 3 times a year, but hey. It's there when I need it. Once again, it's interesting to note and track the rising resistance of the car industry and related auto-centric industries to the rise of the bicycle in our cities. It comes as a bit of a surprise that Zipcar would go after bicycle culture in a campaign, but here they are, doing it. Zipcar is, of course, on Twitter, if anyone is interested.

20110909 zipcar-5door
It was Jym Dyer on Twitter who pointed us in the direction of Zipcar's "Sometimes you just need a Zipcar" campaign, pictured above in situ, from his photostream on Flickr. As he puts it:

"These people apparently live in a world where bike messengers don't exist, so nobody has figured out how to carry papers on a bicycle. Apparently baskets, racks, xtracycles, worktrikes, and bike trailers don't exist either, because you have to carry architectural models on your handlebars. The only alternative, apparently, is a 5-door car. Architects who can't envision carfree spaces are a big part of the problem.

Indeed. The campaign also has a Facebook page where you can add your own dialogue to the photo. I suggest everyone get in there and turn back the automobile tide with their wit. Because there are a whole lot of misconceptions in there.

Jym also pointed out that the architectural model the woman is holding - besides being butt ugly - has an entire ground floor dedicated to car parking. Sooooo last century.

So. How would these well-dressed - and shockingly visionless - architects get to their meeting? Zipcar obviously can't envision how the bicycle has been used for over a century in our cities. Let's help them out, shall we?

Send lawyers, bikes and money Doghouse
At left: Two lawyers outside the Copenhagen City Courts, carrying all manner of legal documents on their bicycles.
At right: A decent front rack - with or without a box - could make it simpler to transport the architectural model - and other things.

Picking Up The Kid Dad and Son
Front racks come in a variety of sizes - I even use it for transporting my kids' bikes from time to time. And everything else under the sun.

Cargo Bike Action
Here's an average load for me and the kids. Two plants, two metal cupboards, a doll and a bunch of other stuff on the Bullitt.

Bike Messenger Paris Bike Culture - La Petite Reine
Like Jym said, what about bicycle messengers? Either a traditional cargo bike or a larger version, like La Petite Reine in Paris (pictured), or a variety of other versions.

Zipcar isn't just playing the anti-cycling card. They're slapping a whole bunch misconceptions out there.
Oh puhlease. Zipcar's advertising people really should get out more often.

Red Light People Green Thing
Christmas Shopping Groceries
The Daily Haul Snowstorm Christmas Shopping
Cargo Shopping Cycling Shopaholic
Carry on in Copenhagen Winter Carrying
Too easy.

Thankfully I've never experienced this cliché but the last two times I've moved flats, I did it on cargo bikes:
Load 5 Me Load 4 Me
And you may remember this film of our friends moving flat in Barcelona by bicycle.

Transporting musical instruments by bicycle?
Musical Transport Bike Battle
At left: A musician arriving at a café in Copenhagen for a gig. A couple of those Christiania bikes and those boys need not take the bus.
At right: A musician setting up to play on a square in Copenhagen with his cargo bike as transport.
Here's a Copenhagenize Flickr set about music, musical instruments and bicycles.

Okay, this one is, in a way, one of those things that's not like the others. To get to the lake/stream, you may want something more than a bicycle depending where it is. But why wouldn't that canoe fit on the subway? They could just stand up, pressing it against the ceiling. If they DID want to transport it by bike, it wouldn't be THAT difficult.
Juletree - Copenhagen Yule Sofa-moving bike, Beijing, China.JPG
That yule tree is not that much shorter than the canoe and that sofa is certainly less handy - and heavier.

Bike Culture Taxi
Now here's a question. Do Zipcars come with detachable bike racks as standard? Nah. Didn't think so. Every taxi in Denmark must be equipped with two bike racks. If you need a taxi and have a bicycle to transport, the driver gets out and takes out the rack from the trunk, sticking it into the standard holder on the back of the taxi. Wouldn't THAT be a good idea for Zipcar and other car share programmes?

How about just be a little bit forward-thinking and selling car share WITH bicycles? We blogged about a great little film from Dublin that promotes combining the two. The bike share programme Go Car teamed up with Bear Bicycles.

By the way, I've heard that Paris is getting a large-scale Zipcar-ish car share programme with electric cars. Don't Zipcars still run on oil? Sheesh. Isn't it 2011, or what?

Here's more from Copenhagenize's The Car Industry Strikes Back series.

General Motors "Like Bikes"

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In stark contrast til General Motors' "Stop pedalling, start driving" campaign, here's a film from what appears to be the 1970s that was produced by General Motors.

"I Like Bikes". It's a weird film and with its 13+ minutes, it's a bit of a snore, although strangely appealing in a zen-like way on a Saturday morning with a hangover. Like watching snooker on Eurosport.

I used to teach storytelling and screenwriting and in that talk I highlighted the evolution of the length of storytelling and the journey from the dawn of the television age to brevity in our dramaturgy. In the 70's you could spend almost 14 minutes explaining what we would, today, compress into 3 minutes or less. Watching the film is like listening to a looong story told by an inebriated, aging member of the family at a dinner party. No clear beginning, middle or end. Getting to the point, if there is one, is like pulling teeth. But hey.

I have absolutely no idea what it's about. I expected a whole bunch of ignoring the bull but it appears, suprisingly, to be rather balanced. Making drivers aware that they should watch out for bikes because they're hard to see. I'm assuming it was a film made for school classes.
Whatever the case, GM says they like bikes! They produced a film placing the responsibility on the motorists to be aware of bicycles. A film that seems to respect the bicycle's prescence on the urban landscape. It's wild! It's crazy!


I like bikes... by yoruse
Did I miss something? Suffer through the film, like I did, and let me know what you think.
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