Best thing about living in or near a bicycle friendly city?

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Easy! Not having to drive over and hour to get to work and back.

Non-homicidal car drivers, perhaps.

Social Rides!!!!
Thirsty, casual,
friendly neighborhood
social rides.
All night even!...
pick any season...
blues cleavin'...
mass up with Steven.....
Por favor? Repitan??.....
SOCIAL RIDES!!!!

Yeah.  I'm conflicted about this as well.  NYC is supposedly bike friendlier than Chicago, but when I rode a bike there it was very stressful and not easier.  So it certainly doesn't FEEL friendly!  Here we are becoming more friendly with new bike lanes going in, but motorists probably still hate us and probably more with the removal of car lanes.  The best part of Chicago is the abundance of bike shops for every budget and new bike lanes of course.    

Crafty Cycling Chick said:

I've never lived in or near a bicycle-friendly city.

A mythical beast -at least here in the USA.

The best I have experienced is a somewhat less bike-hostile city. 

Crafty Cycling Chick said:

I've never lived in or near a bicycle-friendly city.

I thing agendas, politics, and witticisms aside, Chicago is fairly bike friendly in that:

1) we are flat
2) we are based on a grid (albeit love you archer, Ogden, Elston)
3) decent amount of LBS for certain areas
4) our city acknowledges that people ride bikes via buses haul em, some lanes, signs that say yield to us
5) metras bequeath certain hours to us...achem

I like our impromptu parades and beers and baked goodies. I like our linked albeit different tribes and neighborhoods.

The Chainlink!

I definitely agree with that!! Bicycles almost always move casters than traffic.

Christopher C. 10.0+ mi said:
Easy! Not having to drive over and hour to get to work and back.
Maybe bicycle friendly wasn't the best way to describe it, but our city is moving in the right direction with rider safety. I'd say that we are making strides. We are way better off than we were 10 or even 5 years ago!

Crafty Cycling Chick said:

I've never lived in or near a bicycle-friendly city.

I guess I mean a city that recognizes that much of their population commutes by bicycle. Our city is working to add bike lanes, raise awareness of bicycle commuters etc. I'm sure it'll never be perfect, but at least there is a recognizable effort being made.

Beans ~ 15 mi. said:

Please define "Bike Friendly"...

I suspect there's no such thing.

We all want to see progress. This site, our mayor's effort to make Chicago the bike friendliest city in the nation, the "critical mass" movement that is developing, raising awareness of the public at large, these efforts are very encouraging. I look forward to the day when any future metropolitan road project takes into account bicyclists at the outset (as well as retrofitting everything else). We've spent billions on road works infrastructure and the cost of making the system more bike friendly is chump change by comparison, offering huge returns on investment. To most of us here, it's a no brainer. We just have to make sure our voices are heard. This site helps immensely. Power to the self ambulators!

Chi Lowe 12.5+ mi said:

Baww! The nice answers are making me regret my snark :-). Chicago makes me grumpy sometimes but Lisa kinda nailed it: I have you all to scrape me up when I'm beat, and share my joy at the first (and last) snow, enrage and delight me with your comments, and so on. That's how I imagine a bike-friendly city works.

I think things have changed in the year since I started riding just about every day.  Maybe because I am on a bike, but it seems everyone I talk to wants to buy a bike or has bought a bike.  It is impossible to move around this city on even the nastiest weather days without seeing several cyclists.  Today was sort of nasty, but I saw them everywhere.  We might have a long way to go, but at least it appears we are on the path.

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