If you watch the video in this  article, check out how thin all the people are, how quiet the city is and how  many people speak English.
  Groningen: The World’s Cycling City         
              by  Clarence Eckerson, Jr.            on October 9, 2013                       |                       9,188 Plays                       
  It's no secret that just about anywhere you go in the  Netherlands  is an incredible place to bicycle. And in Groningen, a northern city  with a population of 190,000 and a bike mode share of 50 percent, the  cycling is as comfortable as in any city on Earth. The sheer number of  people riding at any one time will astound you, as will the absence of  automobiles in the city center, where cars seem extinct. It is  remarkable just how quiet the city is. People go about their business  running errands by bike, going to work by bike, and even holding hands  by bike.
  The story of how they got there is a mix of great  transportation policy, location and chance. You'll learn quite a bit of  history in the film, but essentially Groningen decided in the 1970s to  enact policies to make it easier to walk and bike, and discourage the  use of cars in the city center. By pedestrianizing some streets,  building cycle tracks everywhere, and creating a unique transportation  circulation pattern that prohibits vehicles from cutting through the  city, Groningen actually made the bicycle -- in most cases -- the  fastest and most preferred choice of transportation.
  It does feel  like bicycle nirvana. When I first got off the train in Groningen, I  couldn't stop smiling at what I saw around me. In an email exchange with  my friend Jonathan Maus from  Bike Portland,  he described it as being "like a fairy tale." This jibed with my first  thought to him -- that I had "entered the game Candyland, but for  bikes!" In fact, for our teaser I originally titled this Streetfilm " Groningen: The Bicycle World of Your Dreams,"  before I talked myself out of it. Although there is a magical quality  about being there, in reality there is nothing dreamy or childlike about  it. With political will and planning, what they have done should - and  can be done - everywhere.
  In our Streetfilm you'll see the 10,000  (!) bicycle parking spaces at the train station, some of the incredible  infrastructure that enables cyclists to make their journeys safer and  quicker, and you'll hear from many residents we encountered who go by  bike just about everywhere they travel. But as one of my interview  subjects, Professor Ashworth, wanted me to point out: the three days I  was there were bright and sunny, and the hardy people keep up the  bicycling through the cold winters. As with many bicycling cities, there  area also big problems with cycle theft, and residents are always  yearning for more bicycle parking.
  I think most of us would trade  some of those problems for a city with 50 percent mode share (and up to  60 percent in the city center!!).
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