Provisional COVID-19 infrastructure induces large, rapid increases in cycling.
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Date
2021
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Volume Title
Publisher
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US
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Washington
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0027-8424
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EDOC
Authors
Abstract
The bicycle is a low-cost means of transport linked to low risk of transmission of infectious disease. During the COVID-19 crisis, governments have therefore incentivized cycling by provisionally redistributing street space. We evaluate the impact of this new bicycle infrastructure on cycling traffic using a generalized difference in differences design. We scrape daily bicycle counts from 736 bicycle counters in 106 European cities. We combine these with data on announced and completed pop-up bike lane road work projects. Within 4 mo, an average of 11.5 km of provisional pop-up bike lanes have been built per city and the policy has increased cycling between 11 and 48% on average. We calculate that the new infrastructure will generate between $1 and $7 billion in health benefits per year if cycling habits are sticky.
Description
Keywords
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America: PNAS
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15
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6