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Cycling is often not a safe or easy way to travel for many Aucklanders. Not many people use their bikes to travel to work, school, shopping or many other daily activities.
Getting more people to cycle will help:
Auckland has much to learn from other cities about how to dramatically increase the number of people cycling.
For example, up to a third of all travel in Amsterdam and Copenhagen is by bike. Only 20 to 30 years ago these places had much lower levels of cycling.
In younger cities, such as Vancouver, Portland and Seattle, sustained effort into separated cycle routes has substantially increased the share of travel by bike.
Between 2015 and 2018, central government and Auckland Council invested around $200 million in cycling. This investment was the first step towards developing complete cycle networks in and around the city centre. It included improvements such as separated cycle lanes and painted arrows on quiet residential streets.
This approach:
Investment added an additional 27 km of cycleways in central parts of Auckland and is already increasing the number of people cycling.
Aucklanders are cycling more and more.
While this recent investment has taken the first steps towards making cycling a safer and more attractive travel option, we need to maintain efforts to join up incomplete networks and extend this across more of Auckland. Efforts need to be targeted to the areas of greatest need and opportunity.
The following factors have influenced where efforts will be focused over the next decade. Our focus is on:
Cycling is a fundamental part of achieving a rapid reduction in transport emissions. As such, the Transport Emissions Reduction Pathway also provides direction for future decision making.
In 2021 the Auckland Transport Alignment Project (ATAP) was updated. It confirmed a major increase to transport funding in Auckland, enabling a $31 billion ten-year transport programme.
It was intended to:
The RLTP 2021-2031 includes around $600 million for Auckland Transport projects focused on improving travel by active modes.
This is supported by additional investment in active modes, like walking and cycling and projects led by Auckland Council - such as the Te Whau Pathway, and Waka Kotahi - such as the Glen Innes to Tāmaki Shared Path.
Funding for active mode improvements supports the provision of: