2
Source: The Netherlands mobility survey and Periodical travel survey Amsterdam
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Between the years 1990 and 2010 Amsterdam saw cycle trips to the city-centre increase from 15 to 25% of all journeys, mostly at the expense of the car2. In this period, relatively few new cycle tracks to the city-centre were constructed, instead it was particularly an increase of the price of paid parking in the citycentre, that made that more and more visitors came to the city-centre by bicycle instead of by car. Currently (2016), parking a car in the city-centre of Amsterdam costs 5 Euros (Rs. 375) per hour.
Case Example
(Recommendations for public parking for cycles are presented in Section 4.3.5.
It is recommended that the PMC’s Parking Policy (draft) 2016 be approved and implemented as a complementary measure of the Pune Cycle Plan.
Paid and controlled parking reduces the demand for motorized trips and makes other modes of transport, like walking, cycling and public transport, more attractive. The PMC’s draft Parking Policy contains a comprehensive approach to provision and management of public parking for motorized vehicles. The policy is fully complementary with cycling inclusive planning.
4.2.2. Controlled Parking for Motorized Vehicles