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Impact of radical bike lane allocation on bi-modal urban road network traffic performance: A simulation case study

Case Study Network © ETH Zürich

Ellen J. Fulton, Ying-Chuan Ni, Anastasios Kouvelas
2025
Full text

To decarbonize urban transport systems, promoting active modes by allocating more road space to cycling infrastructure to achieve a radical modal shift has become a popular transport policy. However, such policies usually receive strong public opposition due to the concern of traffic congestion caused by reduced road capacity for motorized traffic.

From a traffic engineering perspective, this study first aims to answer the question “how much modal shift it requires to counterbalance the impact of road space reallocation on network traffic flow” by conducting a microscopic traffic simulation case study. The city center of Zurich together with the E-Bike City (EBC) network designed in Ballo et al. (2024) is selected for the case study. Through analyzing the changes in origin–destination travel times and network fundamental diagrams, it is first found that congestion level increases significantly in the EBC network with minimal modal shift due to the reduced queue storage space on the roads for cars. In comparison to the situation in the status-quo network, a policy goal of an over fifty percent modal shift is required to mitigate the negative impact on traffic performance. However, congestion can be completely prevented in the large modal shift scenario by better utilizing the capacity of the bike lane network. The findings showcase a possible transition pathway toward a sustainable urban road environment and its outcomes for policymakers. The proposed simulation and analysis framework can also be used by future studies with a similar objective.

In: Case Studies on Transport Policy, Volume 22, December 2025, 101583

Find out more

First insights from our first cycling experimental campaign at ETH Hönggerberg campus in 2024: Exemplary screenshot from video-based trajectory reconstruction © ETH Zürich

How Mass Cycling Impacts Traffic
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This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

67 | September 2025: Models and Methods

  • Mapping Cycling Infrastructure from the Sky
  • Mit VR in die Natur: Neue Wege zur Stressreduktion im Spital
  • Lebendige Milieus am Oberrhein: Landschaften neu wahrnehmen
  • Engaging with Naturecultural Places: Action-Research in Five Sites Across Europe
  • Urban Agroecology on Uetliberg’s Foothills. A Research and Design Study with Grün Stadt Zürich
  • How Mass Cycling Impacts Traffic
  • From Maps to Microclimates: AI for Everyday Planning
Kurzmeldungen | Short Messages
  • Professor Emeritus Günther Vogt mit Jellicoe Award ausgezeichnet
  • Aisling O’Carroll is Tenure Track Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture and Geohistorical Practice
  • Gaststudio Boulouki am Institut für Landschaft und Urbane Studien
  • Der Landschaftsarchitekt João Ferreira Nunes am Institut für Landschaft und Urbane Studien
  • New Project to Foster Antifragility for Urban Traffic Control
  • New Project for Multimodal Traffic Management Solutions
  • Designing Resilient Regenerative Systems: ETH Zurich’s MAS Quests and immersive exhibit
  • FCL Global organises Future Cities Symposium & Exhibition Singapore 2025
Publikationen | Publications
  • Impact of radical bike lane allocation on bi-modal urban road network traffic performance: A simulation case study
  • Urban water projects must consider landscape architecture
  • Strategies and policies of housing cooperatives in Switzerland and Uruguay
  • disP 61/1, March 2025
  • Asunción Futura. Aportes y proyectos conceptuales en la franja costera norte de aunción del Paraguay
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  • Kompaktkurs: KI für Stadt und Raum
  • Systemic Cycles Down the Po River Bioregion – from Ostana to Venice
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Chairs

Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

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