Bikenomics : How Bicycling Can Save the Economy
Bikenomics : How Bicycling Can Save the Economy
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Author(s): Blue, Elly
ISBN No.: 9781621062400
Pages: 192
Year: 201606
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 20.63
Status: Out Of Print

" Bikenomics will make you wonder how cities ever decided to plan for cars in the first place. Elly Blue makes a compelling case for reconnecting with your community in a very authentic way. And she does it with a witty, persuasive voice that makes this refreshingly jargon-free book a pleasure to read."--Alissa Walker, Urbanism Editor, Gizmodo "Blue's book is rational, fully footnoted--and, in the main, persuasive." -- Fast Company "Blue's book helped me better frame my own reasons for riding, and got me thinking a lot about what a more bike-centered future could look like. It's a future, I realized, I'd really like to see." -- The Portland Mercury "Elly Blue has written the Common Sense for the bicycling revolution. Like Tom Paine, Blue set out to show how truths we were raised to believe--streets are for cars, bicycling is an intrusion, cars predominate because they make economic good sense--are really assumptions that defy common sense.


Bikenomics is fact-based but personal, serious but fun, well-researched but readable. It gives cycling advocates the talking points they need to show that the bicycle revolution is just common sense in action." -Peter Norton, author of Fighting Traffic: The Dawn of the Motor Age in the American City "In Bikenomics , Elly Blue powerfully demonstrates the economic benefits of making streets complete again, especially by investing in infrastructure to support the bicycle as a mode of transportation. With a focus on equity, Bikenomics builds a case for bicycle activism and bicycle planning as tools that can achieve a range of economic and quality of life goals and serves as a call and guide to action by illustrating how the benefits of bikability can be shared among bicyclists and motorists alike (and those who use both modes of transportation) and across socioeconomic classes." --Julian Agyeman and Stephen Zavestoski, editors of Incomplete Streets: Processes, Practices, and Possibilities "A thorough dissection of assumptions about cycling that has much to say about what streets are and who they're for."--JH Crawford, author of Carfree Cities.


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