Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Separating Cyclists From Air Pollution

At the heart of many of our discussions about sustainable transportation, when you get down to it, is the issue of justice.

Many times the injustice is plainly egregious. We see it every time a transit agency, with all the community benefits it provides, is forced to grovel for every buck, while state DOTs hand out dollars for highway expansions like they're Chiclets. Or in the high rates of asthma that city kids suffer, in part, as a result of well-off SUV-driving commuters.

One of the under-appreciated injustices, it has always seemed to me, is that cyclists are forced to wait behind cars, breathing in poisonous exhaust, while the person creating the pollution sits inside a tin can full of filtered air (although that air also has its share of poisons).

false

So kudos to Portland State University's Civil and Environmental Engineering Department for taking a look at the issue of air quality as it affects cyclists. Researchers in the department recently released a study comparing the amount of fine particle pollution inhaled by cyclists riding in regular painted bike lanes to the exposure of cyclists riding on separated cycle tracks.

Jonathan Maus at Bike Portland files this report:

The findings of this study show a cycle track roadway design may be more protective for cyclists than a traditional bicycle lane in terms of lowering exposure concentrations of ultrafine particles... Based on these initial findings, understanding roadway and traffic effects on exposure levels can help guide bicycle facility design and pinpoint locations in which mitigation of exposure levels by placement of facilities such as cycle tracks may be most important.

Traffic measurements showed the exposure concentration differences to be greatest at times of highest traffic volumes, emphasizing the importance of mitigation techniques in areas with simultaneously high volumes of motor vehicle and bicycle commuters.

The research team will present its findings at the Transportation Research Board's annual conference in D.C. in January. Let's hope, for the sake of our lungs, traffic engineers across the country are listening attentively.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Cap'n Transit reports on the failure of New York City's commuter van program, designed to take the place of recently closed bus routes. Write of Way analyzes Chicago's GO TO 2040 long-term plan from the perspective of active transportation. And Decatur Metro uncovers some outdated zoning laws requiring a minimum floor area coverage in the city. I wonder how many communities have a similar law on the books that warrant revisiting.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

July 2024 Metro Board Meeting: Ridership Up, Security Measures, LAX, and More

LAX station will open this November. Metro will expand security measures, from TAP-to-Exit to turnstile hardening. Plus more Metro action!

July 25, 2024

Covina to Begin Construction on Recreation Village

The new facility will be next to the Metrolink station and include a variety of opportunities for fitness and amusement

July 25, 2024

Incomplete Streets Part 2: in OC Caltrans Ignores Caltrans Policy on Bike and Pedestrian Needs

Caltrans has a policy requiring Complete Streets in its projects, but Caltrans Districts routinely ignore it

July 24, 2024
See all posts