Mikael is back in Mykolaiv, Ukraine, delivering more bikes with his non-profit Bikes4Ukraine. He explains how Ukrainian cities are ripe for positive urban change, including a transformation to becoming more bicycle-friendly.
    His book Copenhagenize – the definitive guide to global bicycle urbanism has just been published in Ukrainian – one of only 150 new books published since the start of the full invasion. Now he’s starting work as an urban designer on thinking about what needs to be done and what cities are best positioned for rapid and urgent urban change. Mykolaiv and Chernihiv lead the pack.

    Donate money today to Bikes4Ukraine:
    International: https://fundrazr.com/bikes4ukraine
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    Website: https://bikes4ukraine.org

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    #ukraine #urbanism #mykolaiv #urbandesign #urbanplanning #bikes #cycling #bicycle

    I’m here in Mykolaiv and I’m thinking long and hard as I do every time I’m in Ukraine about how Ukrainian cities can improve using the war as an opportunity. The mayor of Mykolaiv – I just met him. I handed him a copy of the Ukrainian version of my book,

    Copenhagenize – The Definitive Guide to Global Bicycle Urbanism. And he expresses – every time I meet him – a desire for bicycle infrastructure to make Mykolaiv into a very, very bicycle friendly city and also becoming one of the first cities in Ukraine to actually do it.

    So I have been looking at this city, maps of it, since I was here last time and starting to think, what do Ukrainian cities need? Not only Mykolaiv here, man, they have incredibly wide Soviet roads. That’s their low hanging fruit, man. They have so much space that given most of it to cars.

    But that really makes it easy. It’s kind of like working in the States, except here there is political will to actually have bicycle infrastructure, which still doesn’t exist really anywhere in the States. Lots of space for bike lanes. And they have had standards here that were American slash Soviet,

    You know, almost four meter wide car lanes. There are new standards here in Ukraine since 2018 where they can be much narrower. You do that, you free up a lot of space on the side. I’ve been studying this city. The Soviet typology is something that I’ve worked with and that I understand.

    So Mykolaiv is really a similar case to that. There is so much potential in this city for becoming more bicycle friendly, for improving public transport as well. There are trolley busses, busses and their trams. Man. They could also use some tender loving care as well.

    Ukrainian cities have the choice now to improve transport in their cities, improve public health, really take a step boldly into the future, reduce the number of cars that dominate the streets. They fly along at such incredible speeds here, man, no respect for speed limits. So the standards have now been changed.

    That creates potential for finding the space which is right there in every city in Ukraine and in the world for bikes, if you want it to be for bikes. Right. So this is the next step. I’m going to continue bringing bikes to Ukraine

    Because there’s going to be a need well into 2023 that won’t stop. So crowdfunding … donate today, but now the next job is starting to redesign Ukrainian cities with my Ukrainian team. With a team in Denmark and Mykolaiv seems to be one of the cities that wants it badly, that wants first.

    Chernihiv is another city that is also incredibly ripe for becoming bicycle friendly as well as all the other things that go along with that. This is the time, man. Mykolaiv is quiet this trip. We were getting shelled last time I was here. the potential is just so striking.

    There is amazing opportunity for doing the right thing for the future of Ukrainians, for the future of Ukrainian cities. The work starts now. Slava Ukraini.

    10 Comments

    1. I was already a fan of your show on TVO, here in Toronto, Canada; but, seeing you visit Ukraine, a country still fighting foreign occupation, increases exponentially the high esteem I already had for you as a person.

    2. I sure hope that it does work out with the current mayor. You don't often get a chance to turn things around for the city.

    3. I am from Kyiv, and I too was fan of your TV show for a few years already. Actually it is the reason why i really loved the urbanism and started to learn much about it. And now you are in Ukraine, from the beginning of big war helping and carrying. I just really want to THANK you for all you do for the Future and especially for an inspiration you give to me! 💚

    4. Slovak/Czech here, studying in Denmark. Slovakia is the western neighbor of Ukraine. In Czech Republic and Slovakia we also have many Eastern bloc style roads, so there is a lot of potential there as well. How do I import the proactive Danish mindset to my country(ies)?

    5. Hey. I'm a Ukrainian cyclist and architect, and I have so much accumulated frustration because of how ridiculous UA bike lanes are. I mean we don't use the ones that we actually have. They are trying to mix us with pedestrians which will never work, so we keep riding on the road. And as you said, the roads are usually wide enough to make dedicated bike paths. But then when we get bike paths on the road surface, cars just park all over them, so we also must solve the parking issue for it to work. Nice video, kudos to you for visiting UA

    6. 1:56 – I can't get, why you made conclusion on crazy driving speeds in Ukraine to be caused by wide streets. Have you ever opened ukrainian administrative code, КУпАП, once? There's no punishment at all for ones driving below +20 kph speeding. Literally if you place 40 kph sign near a school and by some coincidense (because МВС sabotaged traffic cams rollout for years. Just google how закони 16 січня were named for voting in verkhovna rada) there's a traffic cam – one driving 59 kph will be unpunished.
      And if you drive +20…+50 kph against posted speed limit – you get 255 грн penalty, what made 12$ before full scale bombardment and 7$ now.
      In Mykolaiv-sized city it's usually 2-3 speeding cams installed for whole city. If you think it's wide streets that provoke crazy driving speeds, not the feeling of absence of any punishment – I took once screenshot from GPS navigation app during blablacar ride in Вінницька область, Липовецький район Р-21, Щаслива village: mother with child drove 137 kph with unfastened child.
      You won't increase cycling safety in Ukraine without dismissal all МВС employees, who "investigate" traffic offence cases, who "install traffic cams" and without showing ukrainian MPs nordic countries driving codes with adequate punishment for dangerous driving

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