There has been considerable commentary about the paper by Treschke et al
titled Route Infrastructure and the Risk of Injury to Bicyclists,
American Journal of Public Health, current issue or thereabouts. The
paper looks stupendously important, with its long list of public health
professionals authoring it and using very complicated mathematical
programs, and the use of data about two points in each trip: where the
cyclist crashed, and another point where he didn't crash. Much is made
of the claim that cycle tracks are far and away the safest kind of
bicycling facility. However, what we actually have before us is the
result when total ignorance of traffic engineering combines with bicycle
advocacy ideology. I have written a review of this paper and posted it
on my website. For convenience to current email readers, I post only the
Conclusions section here.
Conclusions
I find that this paper (Treschke et al, Route Infrastructure and the
Risk of Injury to Bicyclists) does not deserve serious consideration for
two kinds of defects: the combination of incompetent traffic-engineering
with ideological argument. I offer two examples of this combination.
When considering the small reduction in crash rate produced by bike
lanes versus the larger reduction produced by the absence of parked
cars, the authors chose to advocate that produced by the bike lanes that
they favor.
When considering the astonishing reduction in crash rate produced by
cycle tracks, as shown by their data, the authors chose to proclaim that
reduction as genuine for cycle tracks in general.
In the bike-lane issue, the authors chose to proclaim the effect of bike
lanes, small though it was, rather than the larger effect of the absence
of parking. That combines traffic-engineering incompetence with
ideological propaganda.
In the much more impressive cycle-track issue, the authors proclaimed
enormous crash reduction without informing the readers of the two
relevant facts. First, that their data came from only one installation.
Second, that that installation was not along a typical city street but
in the only situation in which a plain cycle track could possibly be
safe, a place without crossing or turning movements by motorists,
cyclists, or pedestrians. The authors refer to the forty-year-old
cycle-track controversy as if they had studied it, but clearly they
don�t understand it. It is clear that the authors have such faith in the
cycle-track concept that its astonishing data failed to alert them to
investigate why such data was reported.
The authors� failure to understand the difficulties of cycle tracks and
the only conditions in which cycle tracks may be safe constitute
traffic-engineering incompetence.
The authors� proclamation of the great safety of cycle tracks and their
failure to be alerted to problems with the source of their cycle-track
data demonstrate the improper influence of ideological considerations.
The URL for my full review of the Treschke paper is at:
http://johnforester.com/Articles/Facilities/Infrastructure%20&%20Injuries.pdf
--
John Forester, MS, PE
Bicycle Transportation Engineer
7585 Church St. Lemon Grove CA 91945-2306
619-644-5481 fore...@johnforester.com
www.johnforester.com