
Ragazzi, se venite da Kirchberg in direzione Glacis dovreste farlo! Questa deve essere la seconda cosa più trascurata della città, subito dopo i posti prioritari sul tram…
Domani, per favore, andate a controllare voi stessi in modo da poterlo vedere con i vostri occhi e poi – invece di sentirvi in diritto di dire a chi cammina di spostarsi e poi allontanarsi velocemente senza aspettare una risposta – potreste fare del vostro meglio per creare una nuova abitudine di passare dall’altra parte?
https://i.redd.it/aqxnsynaikzg1.jpeg
di GoinEverywhereAnyway
8 commenti
You forgot to mention what they have to do
Not defending this behavior (as them doing that creates frictions between the pedestrians and the cyclists, and can endanger the pedestrians), but the fact that cyclists have to cross the road twice (once here, and another time at the end of the bridge at the big intersection) when they just want to go straight is a poor infrastructure choice. Hopefully this can get addressed at some point by the city (hopefully with separate lanes for cyclists and pedestrians, to prevent frictions between the two) !
This is just poor planning. Taking that narrow path by bike to cross the road is just stupid and endangers pedestrian far more than just going straight. Can’t blame em here.
Maybe check it with your own eyes tomorrow 😉
No the most disregarded thing in the city is the red traffic light for cars getting in/out of the glacis a bit farther
Just ride mindfully.
On god, I always cross to the other side, but it INFURIATES me seeing others bumping into pedastrians on that side.
Do you even see it if you get out off the train thing?
I’ll probably get roasted for saying that, but according to traffic laws, if you’re training for sport on your bike (means your bike must be designed for competition), using a shared bike lane is not mandatory and you can ride on the road as well (R. G-D of 8 April 2018)… Which might actually be safer for pedestrians if you’re fast.
Same if the said bike lane is impassable due to debris, obstacles (ex. pedestrians) or damaged road surface.