Published Jan 31 2022

Three in four people want to ride a bike, but are put off by lack of safe lanes

Cycling is healthy and sustainable, but only 1.7% of trips in Melbourne are made by bike. Car use has soared since lockdowns were lifted.

We surveyed more than 4000 Victorians and found more than three-quarters are interested in riding a bike, but only in infrastructure that separates people from cars (such as off-road paths or protected bike lanes).

This proportion is far higher than previously thought, highlighting a huge opportunity to increase bike-riding rates by building separated bike lanes.

Our study, published in the Journal of Transport and Health, found high levels of interest in bike riding in groups with traditionally lower participation, including women and people living in outer urban fringe areas.

However, these areas tend to have less access to safe, protective and supportive infrastructure than their higher-socioeconomic counterparts.


Read more: Bike kitchens: the community-run repair workshops that help build a culture of cycling


Infrastructure is key

Previous research has shown that how unsafe someone feels when riding a bicycle – particularly in the presence of motor vehicle traffic – is the key barrier to cycling.

Too much existing bike infrastructure is simply a strip of white paint; 99% of existing on-ride bike infrastructure in Melbourne is made up of painted bike lanes, which result in closer motor vehicle passes and don’t protect cyclists from potential injury.

Providing high-quality, connected and protected bike lanes or paths that separate people on bikes from motor vehicle traffic would greatly increase cycling rates in Melbourne.

Bike infrastructure must work for women, as well as men

For every woman that rides a bike in Melbourne, there are two men doing the same.

Despite lower participation, our study showed two-thirds of women are interested in riding a bike, and more than half own a bike. Research suggests women are more likely than men to feel vulnerable to harassment by drivers when riding, may need more storage space than a bike usually provides, and may have more care-giving responsibilities than men. Differing perceptions of risk are also a factor.

Women have different infrastructure preferences to men, with a high preference for bike paths or lanes physically separated from motor vehicle traffic.

Taken together, these factors contribute to a pattern where many city bike paths and lanes are designed for the needs and confidence levels of male cyclists.

Common to many cities in Australia and around the world is what’s known as the “radial planning fallacy”, where transport systems are designed to optimise trips from outer-urban areas to city centres or businesses, rather than to facilitate local trips.

The majority of protected bike paths or lanes in Melbourne are radial in design, with a lack of connectivity between existing paths.

This kind of planning doesn’t support the needs of many actual or aspiring cyclists, particularly women who tend to have more varied trips around places such as school, local shops and other locations close to home.

We must plan bike infrastructure that supports the needs of women, as well as men. Photo: Shutterstock

Outer suburbs are losing out

Despite lower participation, we found that interest in bike riding is high in the outer urban fringe areas of Melbourne.

These areas also have the lowest level of access to safe and comfortable bike infrastructure.

People who are inexperienced or new to bike riding prefer bike paths or lanes that are physically separated from motor vehicle traffic.

But a lack of infrastructure dedicated to active transport, coupled with longer distances to essential services, means people living in outer suburbs are often required to drive long distances.

To address these health and transport inequities, it’s essential we plan and build protected and connected bike infrastructure across Melbourne, including new urban growth areas.

As well as boosting health outcomes, optimising social connection and reducing transport inequities, this would also contribute toward meeting Australia’s net zero emissions targets.


Read more: What Australia can learn from bicycle-friendly cities overseas


This article originally appeared on The Conversation.

About the Authors

  • Lauren pearson

    PhD Candidate, Sustainable Mobility and Safety Research Group, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine

    Lauren is a PhD Candidate in the Sustainable Mobility and Safety Research Group, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine. Her PhD is a mixed-methods project exploring the factors that prevent and factors that encourage people to ride their bikes in Victoria. Using surveys, interviews with community members, and interviews with stakeholder organisation members to form practical recommendations, this work informs local and state-level interventions to equitably enhance participation in bike riding. Lauren is supervised by Dr Ben Beck, Professor Belinda Gabbe, and Dr Sandy Reeder.

  • Ben beck

    ARC Future Fellow, and Head of Sustainable Mobility and Safety Research, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine

    Ben is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow, and Head of Sustainable Mobility and Safety Research in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine. Ben is an applied injury prevention and public health researcher, with a specific focus on enhancing safety and uptake of active and sustainable modes of transport. He leads an interdisciplinary team that brings together experts in injury prevention, public health, road safety, urban and transport planning, and engineering. His team’s work is grounded in robust and diverse research methods across the domains of epidemiology, statistics, spatial analytics, data linkage, machine learning and qualitative methods. Ben is an invited member on key national and international policy committees, including the United Nations’ Green and Healthy Sustainable Transport Taskforce.

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