Bogotá city, Transmilenio transitpoint, 25 May 2008, By S2RD2, Flickr, Creative Commons

Case

Bogotá: More bikes and buses, fewer cars

Bogotá, Colombia, aims to establish a more sustainable transport system by creating a network of bike paths covering most of the city. They are upgrading the bus system and restricting cars in the city. The first move towards the increased sustainable transport system was taken by then Bogota Mayor Enrique Peñalosa back in 1998.


In Bogotá more than 300 km of bicycle lanes, stretching from the slum areas and suburbs into the capital centre been, have been built. The bicycle lanes are an ongoing project under concurrent development. Since the construction of the lanes, bicycle use has increased by 5 times in the city. It is estimated that there are between 300,000 and 400,000 trips made daily in Bogotá by bicycle. A large portion of these rides are in the southern, poorer areas.

The bike network has a hierarchy determined by the following criteria. The main network connects the main centers of the city in a direct and expeditious manner, for instance connecting the main work and education centers with the most populated residential areas. The secondary network connects housing centers, attraction centers and parks with the main network. The complementary network links provides continuity to the network. It includes a recreational network, local networks and a system of long green areas.

Cycling day, Bogotá, 12 Nov 2005, MacAllenBrothers, Flickr, Creative Commons

The public transport system of Bogotá has also been improved. There is no metro in the city, but instead TransMilenio, an affordable and rapid bus transit system, has been implemented. TransMilenio includes numerous elevated stations in the center of a main avenue. Users pay at the station by smartcard and await the arrival of the bus, whose doors open at the same time as the sliding glass doors of the station. The buses have dedicated lanes and on the station extra lanes allows express buses to pass through without stopping.  In early 2006 commuters completed 1,050,000 trips a day. Because of restriction on private cars in the inner city during rush hour, the TransMilenio buses are running three times as fast as a typical New York bus, which equals 28 km an hour.

In Bogotá vehicle traffic is reduced by 40% through a measure that restricts vehicles, according to the last number in their license plate, from travelling during peak hours in the entire urban area. In addition car free Sundays (Ciclovia) and the laying down of thousands of parking spots have made the roads more pedestrian-friendly. On car free Sundays the city is now using public streets as a large open park and there are plenty free exercises for families to attend. Bogota has become a healthier and safer city with greater social integration and cheap, sustainable transport. 

“We need to see public transport not as a technical means of transporting people from point A to B, but as a form of social justice.”Richard Burdett, Professor of Architecture and Urbanism, London Sschool of Economics (2007)

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Comments

Thanks for including the case of Bogotá, I think Enrique Peñalosa did a great job. Did you know he was inspired by Jaime Lerner in Curitiba? Maybe you could use Curitiba as a case study too?

FJT

Bogotá should definitely serve as a role model for all major cities worldwide regarding traffic management. Not only to effectively deal with congestion, but the pollution aspects of the congestion as well. Hats off to Bogotá Mayor Enrique Peñalosa! :)

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Making the Change

Key Learning Points

The overall plan for the Bogotá bike network means that the connection, speed and safety for bike traffic is highly improved

The TransMilenio rapid bus transit system is based on physically separate bus lanes, ticket machines and smart cards which means that passengers pay before entering the bus, reducing transit time significantly

Bogotás reduction of car traffic by 40% makes it possible for buses to maintain an average speed of 28km an hour, even during rush hour

The car-free day (Ciclovia) provides both quality to city spaces and CO² reduction, thus a clear sign of municipality intent regarding sustainable infrastructure

How to

Develop an overall strategic plan for biking in the city.

Create separate lanes for public transport i.e. buses.

Use car free days to show the inhabitants of the city the joy of using city spaces to other activities than transport.

Facts

City Facts

Country: Colombia
City: Bogotá
Area: 1,587 km² (city)
Population: 7,332,788 (city, 2010)
Population density: 3,914/km² 
GDP per capita (country): USD 9,200 (2009 est.)

Source: WikipediaCIA World Factbook

Project facts

Total bike lanes built and in use: 340 km in 7 years

Under construction: 13 km.

Peak hours: 6:00-8:00 am/5:00 -7:00.pm.

Total overall investment: USD 50 mio.

Cost per built km.: USD 147,000

Homes with bikes: 54% de 1,596,860

Bikes per home: 2

Daily users: 83,500

Users per week: 500,650

Mean speed: 17 km/h.

Use purpose: study 35%, work 31%, sports 14%, various business 16%, recreation 4%

Case description from C40

Description of the TransMilenio system

Car free Bogotá

Transportation in Bogotá

PowerPoint on Bogotá’s traffic systems

Media

YouTube

Ciclovia Bogotá

Google Map

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