Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

Protected Bike Lanes 7 Times More Effective Than Painted Ones, Survey Says

alki 570
Alki Avenue, Seattle.
false
pfb logo 100x22
false

Michael Andersen blogs for The Green Lane Project, a PeopleForBikes program that helps U.S. cities build better bike lanes to create low-stress streets.

We all know that if your goal is to get meaningful numbers of people to ride bicycles, protected bike lanes are better than conventional ones painted into a door zone. But how much better?

Well, adding a bike lane to a four-lane commercial urban street increases the number of American adults who say they'd be "very comfortable" biking on it from 9 percent to 12 percent.

Making that bike lane protected increases the number to 29 percent.

two infrastructure types 570
false

The finding comes from a survey of adults in the 50 largest U.S. metro areas by the National Association of Realtors, conducted by Portland State University and published this summer. It's some of the clearest, simplest evidence yet that for people of every demographic, a door-zone painted bike lane on a busy street makes far less difference to people's biking comfort than one with a physical barrier between bike and car traffic.

In fact, the experience of riding in a protected bike lane beats riding in a painted door-zone one by about as much as riding on an off-street path beats riding on a city street at all. That's true across the board: women and men, every generation, every income, every education level.

three infrastructure types 587
false

(You can read the exact wording of the question here. Participants could choose "very comfortable," "somewhat comfortable," "somewhat uncomfortable," "very uncomfortable" or "don't know.")

Obviously there are many streets where cities can't install protected bike lanes, at least not yet. But if your city's goal is to increase the number of trips people take on bikes, it shouldn't be creating door-zone bike lanes unless there's a clear reason not to do better.

White paint just isn't good enough to make a major difference.

Looking for statistics that make the case for protected bike lanes? We've got a database of them.

You can follow The Green Lane Project on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook or sign up for its weekly news digest about protected bike lanes.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Transform, Partners Demand $2 Billion for the Bus

A coalition of transit advocates, providers, and unions is urging California’s Senate and Assembly leaders to put $2 billion for transit operations and capital improvements into the state’s budget.

March 13, 2025

Thursday’s Headlines

VTA Strike Goes to Day 4, Embarcadero Redesign, Pasadena Safe Streets, and Dark News from DC.

March 13, 2025

What if the ‘Tesla Takedown’ Is Only the Beginning?

Tesla's cars have become symbols of Elon Musk's controversial role in U.S. politics — but they're also instruments of a violent system that long predates his time in the White House.

March 12, 2025

Eyes on the Street: Metro LAX Station Under Construction

Today's photos of LAX Metro Transit Center construction - with the new bike path and people mover visible The post Eyes on the Street: Metro LAX Station Under Construction appeared first on Streetsblog Los Angeles.

March 12, 2025

Wednesday’s Headlines

Freeway widenings, transit strikes, tariffs, but the news isn't all bad....

March 12, 2025
See all posts