| “Cycling
is our answer to the soaring gas prices.”
IN Marikina City, a fifth
of the workforce will roll on two wheels and shear sweat power
soon.
That’s because up
to 20% of Marikina City residents will be able to ride a bicycle
to work when “The Bicycle-friendly City” program
of Marikina is completed in 2006.
Thanks to a novel idea thought
up by the city government, which has introduced a cycling
revolution of sorts since 1999.
“Cycling is our answer
to the soaring gas prices,” said Mayor Ma.
Lourdes C. Fernando. “Bicycles
are our provider of affordable mobility.” Aside from
lower transport cost over short distances, cycling also reduces
vehicle gas emissions thereby leading to better health.
For the project to work,
Marikina City built a network of dedicated bike lanes within
its boundaries.
Serpentine and extensive,
the bikeway mostly veers away from the crowded city streets
typically snarled with traffic and steaming with fumes.
Instead, the bike lanes
take a path that even offers a picturesque view of Marikina’s
clean rivers, waterways and landscaped gardens.
So far, the city has built
29 kilometers of bike lanes, or 44% of the target. Mayor Fernando
says an additional 14 kilometers is set for completion by
March 2006.
When the entire project
is done, one can bike around a network that runs 66 kilometers
from end-to-end.
The project is funded through
a US$1.3-million grant from the World Bank Global Environment
Facility (2001) and P15.5 million from the city’s Countrywide
Development Fund (2002 to 2004).
The average commuting distance
of people to work is roughly two kilometers.
It is estimated that 7.5%
of the city’s population of half a million whiz around
Marikina on bike everyday.
It thus comes as no surprise
when accidents and theft happen to a biking population of
this size.
“We have equipped
our peace keeping volunteers with 150 bikes for patrol,”
she says. “We have also given out 87,000 bicycle guidebooks
to households in the city.”
The guidebook is part of
the awareness and education campaign launched by the city
to promote the use of bikes and ensure safety. The city also
purchased 500 training bikes for learners.
“When the project
is completed in 2006, we hope to be the best bicycle-
friendly city,” says Mayor Fernando. The city is halfway
through this promise.
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