People on Bikes are the Happiest Commuters
9 October 2018
New research shows cyclists are the happiest travellers on the road for reasons beyond protecting the planet or improving health and fitness.
Dr Kirsty Wild, Research Fellow on the
'Future of the Bike' project at the University of Auckland,
has found that the smiles you see on the faces of bike
commuters as they whizz past while you’re stuck in
bumper-to-bumper traffic are the result of one simple thing:
control.
“Car drivers in Auckland on average have
to add 50 percent to their driving times to be sure
they’ll get to work on time,” says Dr Wild. “Our study
showed that cyclists have a level of control over that time
that other commuters do not, and that leads to less
stress.”
“I think a lot of people think that
cycling isn’t for them because there’s so much focus on
these big, virtuous goals like saving the environment or
getting healthy,” says Dr Wild. “But it’s really the
simple pleasures that make cyclists so happy. A big one is
time reliability. People want to feel like they’re in
control of their lives, and cycling provides a greater
opportunity to do just that.”
Dr Wild and fellow
researchers interviewed riders, planners and retailers,
studied traffic patterns, and followed a group from Auckland
Hospital transitioning for the first time to e-bikes. As
well as the time advantage, other feel-good factors reported
by participants in the study include the sensory stimulation
of being outside, the positive effects of moderate exercise
and the social interactions along the way that drivers tend
to miss out on.
The study also revealed that
e-bikes are putting the benefits of cycling within reach of
many more commuters by tripling the comfortable riding
distance (from 5km to 15km each way) and acting as an
‘equaliser’, especially for women, older people, and
riders with disabilities. On the busy Northwestern cycleway,
for example, women make up 27 percent of total riders, but
41 percent of those on e-bikes.
With 17,000
e-bikes arriving in the country per year, clearly
Auckland’s commuting habits stand to be transformed.
Accordingly, the study recommends addressing barriers to
biking, starting with creating more high-quality separated
cycle lanes.
Barb Cuthbert, Chair of the cycling
advocacy organisation Bike Auckland, says the research
confirms the growing diversity of the city’s cycling
population, and the pent-up demand for a joined-up cycleway
network and more bikeable neighbourhoods.
“There’s a transport revolution taking place
right in front of our eyes. E-bikes are being adopted in
numbers by people that even a few years ago you might not
have expected to see on a bike. Older people, shoppers,
families in cargo bikes, people wearing suits and ties,
frocks and heels,” Cuthbert says. “As well, initiatives
like bike share and community bike kitchens are bringing
bikes into reach of all sorts of Aucklanders, inviting more
and more of us to hop on a bike for neighbourhood trips and
daily travels.”
Bike Auckland is celebrating
Auckland’s diversifying bike culture with a fun
personality quiz to highlight the way cycling can fit all
sorts of lifestyles, released this week as part of the
Biketober month of cycling celebration that encourages
people to hop on their bikes for spring.
The
‘cycle-ology quiz’ invites people to answer a few simple
questions online to find out which of five ‘bike gangs’
they belong to, and is supported by high-profile Kiwis
Jeremy Corbett, Mike McRoberts, Matilda Rice, Art Green,
Suzy Cato and Avi Duckor-Jones. (https://www.bikeauckland.org.nz/bike-personality-cycle-ology-quiz/).
A charity auction on Trade Me offers the chance to bid for an ‘e-bike date’ with each of these bike-friendly celebrities, in support of Bike Auckland’s work for a more bike-friendly city. The auctions run until Thursday 18 October and can be found at trade.me/bikedates
About Bike Auckland
As the non profit organisation working for a better city for people on bikes, Bike Auckland advocates for a truly bikeable city, advises on best quality, world-class bike infrastructure and activates our neighbourhoods by getting more Aucklanders out on bikes. For more information please visit: www.bikeauckland.org.nz
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