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Michael Andersen blogs for The Green Lane Project, a PeopleForBikes program that helps U.S. cities build better bike lanes to create low-stress streets.

Here's one reason the modern biking boom is great for everyone: more bicycle trips mean fewer car trips, which can mean less congestion for people in cars and buses.

But there's a catch. A recent study shows that when bicycle use rises but cities don't add bike lanes to put the new bikers in, traffic congestion actually gets worse.

In some situations, it gets a lot worse.

A study measured travel delay on a street with bikes but no bike lanes

NE 47th Avenue, Portland.

HOOOONK.

It's happened to most regular bike users; it happened to me last week. Biking to meet friends at a restaurant, I had to pedal two blocks uphill on a street without bike lanes. As I started to push up the slope, a man zoomed his car around me, straddling the two lanes and laying on his horn as if I'd done something wrong.

I'd love to be out of your way too, I wanted to tell him. But this parking lane would have to go.

I had every legal right to use the traffic lane. But a 2013 study from the University of Virginia's civil engineering school shows that in a sense, the man wasn't wrong. I was indeed slowing the whole system down.

"Safety, comfort and all that aside, the efficiency of a dedicated facility is that you can maintain varying speeds," said Alec Gosse, an author of the UVA study, in an interview this week. "If you're on some sort of major street with bus traffic in particular, then you end up leapfrogging the bus. And no one is happy about that."

If you don't add bike lanes, each additional bike makes car and bus travel slower

The model studied streets with one travel lane in each direction and a bus line that could get stuck behind a bike.

The study, co-authored by Gosse and his professor Andres Clarens, used a traffic simulation to compare four theoretical two-way, two-lane streets:

A) One where bicycles were 1 percent of traffic (about the level of many U.S. cities) with no bike lanes.

B) One where bicycles were 1 percent of traffic with bike lanes.

C) One where bicycles were 10 percent of traffic (about the level of Eugene, Oregon, or Boulder, Colorado) with no bike lanes.

D) One where bicycles were 10 percent of traffic with bike lanes.

The street with the most congestion? It wasn't Street A, which represents so many in the United States today.

The most congested street was Street C.

Even after Gosse and Clarens assumed that cars, trucks and buses would have a chance to pass a bike every 100 meters or so, the increased biking only slowed everyone down.

Jonathan Lewis, deputy director of transportation in Atlanta, said he's noticed this in action.

"The phenomenon is real," he said. "We have some busy streets that definitely are nowhere near 10 percent of the volume, but there'll be a few bikers on there every rush hour. And the impact is huge. So I think if a street is near capacity and you have a few brave souls trying to bike on it, then they can have a pretty big impact. And then they don't want to sit at the traffic light, so they'll jump the whole queue and start the whole process over again."

The problem seems intractable. Even if a city succeeds in boosting bike use, it faces a backlash once the new riders start slowing traffic.

Fortunately, the study by Gosse and Clarens also suggested a way out.

If you do add bike lanes, each additional bike helps everybody

10th Street, Atlanta.

To be sure, travel speed isn't the most important thing in the world. On some streets, a little travel delay can be great for both local businesses and driver safety.

And the UVA findings don't mean that people shouldn't be allowed to bike in travel lanes on popular roads. Restricting public streets to people who own cars would be both unjust and impossible to enforce.

But the study does mean something very important to the politics of bike infrastructure.

If a city doesn't build bike lanes, then "bikes vs. cars" is actually real. But if a city builds bike lanes, more biking becomes a win-win.

Public support for bike infrastructure and programming depends on one crucial concept: that more biking benefits people whether or not they ever ride a bike themselves. Lewis, the Atlanta transportation deputy director, said that's one big reason it's important to add bike lanes to busy streets when possible.

"It helps people not hate bikes," he said. "If you've got the space, of course the bike lanes will help congestion."

The model studied streets with one travel lane in each direction and a bus line that could get stuck behind a bike.

But for a city to keep its bike lane network growing, where will the road space come from?

On streets with more than one lane in each direction, the best answer is often a road redesign that also adds a center turn lane or removes passing lanes. But for two-lane streets, the UVA study offers another useful answer: curbside parking spaces.

Because the Gosse-Clarens model calculates the anti-congestion benefits of a bike lane to the transportation system, it offers a way for cities to calculate how much money a curbside parking space needs to be worth in order to justify its existence.

"If you have a parking space, that's basically going to provide a service for, I don't know, five, eight people for day?" Clarens said. "I like street parking as much as the next guy. … But at the end of the day when you think about what is the total societal cost of that pavement, it can be allocated better; it can be used better."

Lewis said that's exactly what Atlanta has concluded, too. It's now working on several projects that will replace parallel parking with bike lanes.

"That's been an important opportunity for us," Lewis said. "It's just a better use of the pavement."

You can follow The Green Lane Project on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook or sign up for its weekly news digest about protected bike lanes.

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