How amsterdam became the bicycle capital of the world

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Cities Cycling the city

How Amsterdam became the bicycle capital of the world In the 1960s, Dutch cities were increasingly in thrall to motorists, with the car seen as the transport of the future. It took the intolerable toll of child traffic deaths – and fierce activism – to turn Amsterdam into the cycling nirvana of today

Stop de Kindermoord campaigners visit Amsterdam’s House of Representatives in 1972, a year after more than 400 children were killed in traffic accidents. Photograph: Fotocollectie Anefo/Society for the Nationaal Archief Cities is supported by

About this content

Renate van der Zee Tuesday 5 May 2015 03.04 EDT

A

nyone who has ever tried to make their way through the centre of Amsterdam in a car knows it: the city is owned by cyclists. They hurry in swarms through the streets, unbothered by traffic rules, taking precedence whenever they want, rendering motorists powerless by their sheer numbers. Cyclists rule in Amsterdam and great pains have been taken to accommodate converted by Web2PDFConvert.com


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