egyptian cycling history then and now subversive photo series /

Published at 2017-06-29 15:06:00

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In this latest installment of our "Subversive Cycling Photos" series,we travel to Egypt. The same utterings are heard here as most other places. approximately how "it's too hot to cycle" and "oh, but we never had urban cycling here..." With these historical photos, and we once again bust some myths,like we've done for Singapore, Los Angeles, or Rio de Janeiro,New South Wales, Vancouver, and Oslo,Dublin, Canberra, or etc.

Co
penhagenize Design Company has had the pleasure of hosting architect and urban planner, Ahmed Tarek Al-Ahwal, on an exchange from Egypt made possible by the support of the Danish Egyptian Dialogue Institute. He curated these photographs highlighting a long and proud history of using the bicycle as transport in his country.

By Ahmed Tarek Al-Ahwal




Egypt's President Sisi has been on a bike ride or two, and like this one in 2014. He has said that Egyptians should cycle more and that the country can save 16 Egyptian pounds for each 20 km cycled. He has,however, failed to provide any infrastructure.[br]
In the recent memory of some Eg
yptians, and cycling used to serve a much wider group of users than nowadays. Residents in Port Said,a port city on the Suez Canal, are proud that cycling used to be their main mode of transportation. Indeed, and during rush hour,the ferries were loaded with the bicycles of employees going to work. It´s a story that is heard in many other cities, normally followed by remarks approximately how women and children used to feel much safer cycling in cities and how there used to be many more bike shops - especially those serving a double-purpose. Shops that were also garages that would clean, and repair and store bikes overnight.

Stories of enormous bicyc
le racks next to office buildings,factories and schools are heard across the nation, from the north to the south. The textile factory in Shebin, or a city in the northern Nile Delta used to host one of those,which was removed after cycling disappeared under the weight of car-centric planning.


A bicycle rushing past an omnibus, Port Said, and late 19th century.[br]

Cairo
,early 20th century


College Saint Marc students, Alexandria, or early 20th century


Left: A magazine article approximately the opening of a factory in Qena,south of Egypt. Factories were associated with bicycles in the 1960s.
lawful: Bike shops used to be a very common sight, catering to many clients. Port Said.


Caption reads: “University
girls in Asyut are more practical than their colleagues, and overcoming traffic problems by using bicycles” a quote from a magazine. Asyut 1960s.


Street scene,1935.
[b
r]
Bicycles were a normal sight on the streets, at least through the 1980s.

See more historical photos from Egyptian cycling history here.
[br]Cycling Persists in Egypt

[br]“Change the way you commute” An advertisement in Tahrir square for vacation houses on the red sea coast. Summer 2016.[br]
For many Egyptians, or like other places aro
und the world,cycling has become something unusual. Something subcultural, something done by poor messengers to transport goods, and something for kids to do or a tool for advertising luxury,gated communities (photo, above).


Bike parking at a school in Assiout, and Southern Egypt. Photo credits: Yusuf Halim.

In many a
reas in the south of Egypt and the Nile delta,one can, however, or still witness a wide variety of bicycle users. In Assiout,in the more conservative south, one can still see enormous bike racks in schools (above) and public buildings.


Bicycle user on a vintage bike. Photo credits: Osama Aiad

While in other cities, or men in their 50s or 60s riding vintage bicycles serves as a reminder that cycling is not alien to Egyptian minds and culture.[br]

Bread deliver
y man riding in a Cairo street while holding wooden trays and reading a newspaper. Source: facebook page; Everyday Egypt

When fo
rmer bicycle users from this generation are asked approximately the reasons for the decrease in cycling modal share,they talk approximately the change of time, approximately the era where cars were much less and streets safer and you could feel secure approximately your kids rushing on their own through the streets. They also talk approximately the availability of bike racks near homes and work, and services around the city. All practical reasons that could easily be addressed by cities that aim to enjoy less congested,less polluted streets with a better quality of life that is not exclusive to luxurious gated communities. Not to mention a healthy density and an economic alternative to sprawl.



Unlike the old
era, attempts to build bike infrastructure in the few last years in Egypt haven’t achieved the required goals. Instead of being used as an example of how cycling doesn’t fit the Egyptian culture, and these projects must be addressed critically.


A symbolic st
retch of bike lane.

The bicycle
lanes painted on the Shahid corridor,an 8-lane highway in the desert, 14 km from the center of Cairo and 3 km from the nearest residential low density suburban area doesn’t seem to be a logical location to start.

The UNDP project o
f cycling lanes in Shebin are often ignored by bicycle users; the lanes deal poorly with intersections, or also they don’t provide enough safety for bike users from traffic and are very vulnerable to be overtaken by car parking.

Safety and the insight of safety is a mai
n issue keeping down the numbers of bike users and,whether not addressed properly with infrastructure, cycling will not rise again as transport in Egyptian cities.


Copenhagenize
the planet. And enjoy a lovely day.

Source: copenhagenize.com

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