Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Bicicleta. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Bicicleta. Mostrar todas as mensagens

Bicicleta Roubada XXIV

"na noite de domingo para segunda roubaram-me a bicicleta (igual à da fotografia mas preta). é praticamente nova mas tem o plástico que cobre a corrente partido.
se alguém, especialmente da zona de Benfica, tiver alguma informação agradeço (muuuito) que me contacte. sei perfeitamente que a probabilidade de a voltar a ver é mínima mas não perco nada em fazer esta última tentativa desesperada.
obrigada!
ps: os cadeados para motas não são tão fortes como parecem, depois não digam que não avisei."

Bicicleta Roubada XXIII

"Roubaram-ma ontem em Alvalade, são 8 anos juntos, é o meu meio d deslocação, pedalo mais do que ando. E agora alguém decidiu tirar-ma. Se a virem com alguém em cima dêem-lhe um carolo e tragam-ma de volta!"

Bicicleta Roubada XXII

"roubaram-me a bicicleta ontem em Lisboa, no Martim Moniz. É uma b-fold 500. Tem apenas uma semana... está nova, nova. As hipóteses de que apareça são 0,01 claro... mas tenta-se... 
Muito obrigada!"

Seguro escolar não paga acidentes de alunos que vão de bicicleta para a escola

Portaria com 16 anos só cobre acidentes dos alunos que
vão a pé 
PÚBLICO/ARQUIVO

24/05/2015
Na escola “Aníbal Cavaco Silva”, em Boliqueime, pais e alunos vão este domingo “De bicicleta em família” a pedalar para que seja alterada uma lei anacrónica.

Os acidentes com bicicletas, no decorrer do trajecto de casa para escola, não estão cobertos pelo “seguro escolar”. Em caso de acidente, o seguro só vale de alguma coisa se o aluno fizer a deslocação de casa para a escola a pé. Hoje, na escola Básica Integrada, Aníbal Cavaco Silva, em Boliqueime, um grupo de pais e alunos vai “pedalar”, para que seja alterada uma portaria, publicada há 16 anos, quando os transportes alternativos e a mobilidade suave não faziam parte do quotidiano da vida dos portugueses.
Paulo Carvalheiro, professor de Educação Visual, luta há quase duas décadas para alterar as mentalidades, em relação à mobilidade. Quando começou a ir de bicicleta de casa para a escola, - numa altura em que as atenções estavam viradas para último modelo de automóvel acabado de sair (mesmo que fosse comprado a crédito),- foi visto como uma espécie de extraterrestre. “Paulo, estás bem? … Passa-se alguma coisa?”, diz, a lembrar algumas das perguntas que colegas e amigos lhe faziam, quando chegava, de pedaleira, para se livrar do “sarilho” automobilístico. As coisas mudaram, em termos de aceitação social, mas a lei permaneceu colada ao passado.   
Segundo a Portaria 413/99, de 8 de Junho (artigo 25º, alínea f, estão excluídos da cobertura do seguro escolar “os acidentes que ocorram em trajecto com veículos com ou sem motor, que transportem o aluno ou sejam por este conduzidos”. O diploma, subscrito pelos ministérios das Finanças, Educação e da Saúde, só admite excepção, para efeitos de cobertura de risco, se o uso da bicicleta for inserido numa “actividade escolar”. O valor do prémio pago pelo Estado à seguradora corresponde a um por cento do ordenamento mínimo nacional (cerca de cinco euros/ano) por cada aluno. Os acidentes que possam vir a ocorrer com os veículos afectos aos transportes escolares, também estão fora da cobertura desta apólice - mas nesse caso existe um seguro especifico de responsabilidade civil.
O presidente da Federação Portuguesa de Cicloturismo e Utilizadores da Bicicleta (FPCUB), José Manuel Caetano, reclama a revogação do diploma que considera anacrónico: “Não faz sentido que haja uma lei a discriminar o uso da bicicleta, quando o risco de sinistralidade com este veículo, quando comparado com o automóvel, não é mais do que uma formiga em relação ao elefante”. Paulo Carvalheiro, que fez a escola primária na Alemanha – onde aprendeu a dar as primeiras pedaladas – justifica o encontro “De bicicleta em família”, (inserido no programa Europen Cycling Challenger 2015), como uma forma de chamar a atenção para a necessidade de inverter o estado das coisas.
A proposta consiste em fazer um passeio entre Vale Judeu e Boliqueime, convidando os pais e os filhos, a percorrerem cerca de sete quilómetros, por uma via do interior. Este é o caminho que ele faz todos os dias de casa para a escola onde dá aulas e, ultimamente, duas vezes por semana – à quarta e à sexta - acompanhado de um grupo de dez alunos. “Quero demonstrar, no Domingo, que o percurso é seguro”. Aliás, ressalva: “ quero compartilhar este luxo - de manhã, a ouvir os passarinhos, e não as buzinadelas dos carros a passarem por nós”. 
O professor, de 47 anos, dinamizador da equipa de BTT da escola, reconhece que se seria “mais confortável” não desafiar as instituições. “É um risco”, admite, mas acha que é  “urgente mudar, em diversos contextos” a forma como é olhado este meio de transporte. “É necessário criar vias, com segurança, para que os pais não fiquem casa com o coração nas mãos”, diz, referindo-se ao trabalho que falta fazer da parte dos municípios. Ao nível da região falta, também, concluir a Ecovia do Algarve. No troço entre Faro e Olhão, por exemplo, os ciclistas são convidados a deixar o percurso junto à ria Formosa, sendo empurrados para o meio do intenso e perigoso tráfego da Estrada Nacional (EN) 125.
Por seu lado, José Manuel Caetano, destaca o papel que a escola deve ter na “formação de cidadãos responsáveis”, destacando as boas práticas de vida saudável, a andar de bicicleta. Paulo Carvalheiro vai mais longe, na ligação entre o sucesso no ensino e a prática desportiva. Para isso, recua a 1994, o ano em que deu aulas em Quarteira. “Querem dar uma volta de bicicleta comigo?”, A resposta, vinda de uma turma de alunos considerados “problemáticos”, surpreendeu. Alguns jovens que outros consideravam “perdidos” numa comunidade multicultural, diz, encontraram um novo rumo. Agora, seguindo o lema da canção, de Zeca Afonso,  “vem, e traz um amigo também” fez da bicicleta a sua “arma” na luta pela inclusão social."

What biking’s gender gap really says about America

by  October 1, 2014

"In recent years there’s been overall major support for biking among Americans, but women make up only a quarter of all bike trips in the United States.
Earlier this year, major bike share programs released data showing a glaring gender disparity among bike renters in New York, Chicago, and Boston. Women riders accounted for an average of 23.5 percent of overall rentals across these cities.
The raw data in these studies points pretty blatantly to the existence of the gap. As with any study however, the numbers themselves aren’t as important as where they come from, or as what we choose to do with them.
So let’s take a closer look.
For starters, the reasons behind many women’s reluctance to biking has been well documented. Elizabeth Plank at Mic writes the gender gap can largely explained by a mix of “women’s aversion to risk, women’s clothing, economic and time poverty, as well as sexual harassment.”
Women frequently cite safety as a major concern for cycling on the road. Lacking infrastructure and aggressive drivers are among several major risk factors that many women weigh in deciding whether to bike or not.
Beyond traffic safety, personal safety is on the line as well. Grooming and getting “office ready” post-ride keeps many women off bikes. And whether they’re wearing work fashions, cozy weekend gear or “cycling chic” clothing, many women are subjected to sexual harassment while biking.
Beyond those issues, and a long list of traffic concerns, we land on the issues of time and money—the two categories into which seemingly all other factors fall. We know that on average American women make less money than American men, so women need to spend more time working to make even close to an equal wage. They also frequently have more increased responsibilities at home compared to their male counterparts, hence, less time.
For many women, using a bike as a major mode of transportation just isn’t efficient for their lifestyle. For plenty of others, biking is just the right fit. Whether the majority of women want to bike or not isn’t the issue. The issue is working to eliminate the frequent barriers to biking so that any woman who wants to do it can if she chooses.
That’s a long road. But the data, at least, serves as a reminder of the strides we still need to make, and at best, offers some opportunities for action."


Walking or cycling to work 'improves well-being'

Commuters who changed their mode of travel to cycling or walking felt more content
14 September 2014

"Switching from driving a car to walking or cycling to work improves our well-being, a study suggests.
Active commuters felt better able to concentrate and under less strain than when travelling by car, University of East Anglia (UEA) researchers said.
Even going by public transport was preferable to driving, data from 18,000 UK commuters over 10 years suggested.
Researchers said policies encouraging people to leave their cars at home could have a big impact on well-being.
The physical health benefits of exercise are already well known and this study reinforces the idea that there are positive psychological effects too.

Start Quote

People feel better when they have a longer walk to work”
Adam MartinUEA
The study, carried out at UEA's Norwich Medical School and the Centre for Health Economics at the University of York, used data on nearly 18,000 adult commuters from across the UK over 18 years.
Out of this group, 73% said they went to work by car, 13% walked and 3% cycled to work. About 11% used public transport on their commute.
Those who had an active commute were found to have a higher level of well-being than those who went by car or public transport.
When researchers analysed the wellbeing of a small group who swapped the car or bus for a bike or going on foot, they found they became happier after the switch.
A busy London street
Walking or cycling to work improved the commuting experience
The study looked at feelings of worthlessness, unhappiness, sleepless nights, and being unable to face problems. The researchers also accounted for numerous factors known to affect well-being, including income, having children, moving house or job, and relationship changes.
Lead researcher Adam Martin, from UEA's Norwich Medical School, said: "Our study shows that the longer people spend commuting in cars, the worse their psychological well-being. And correspondingly, people feel better when they have a longer walk to work."
Mr Martin said the study's finding that commuters felt better when travelling by public transport, compared with driving, was "surprising".
"You might think that things like disruption to services or crowds of commuters might have been a cause of considerable stress.
"But as buses or trains also give people time to relax, read, socialise, and there is usually an associated walk to the bus stop or railway station, it appears to cheer people up."
The UK Faculty of Public Health welcomed the findings of the study, published in the journal, Preventive Medicine.
It said streets that were for people, rather than cars, promoted neighbourliness and helped everyone to have happy communities."

Bicicleta Roubada XXI


"Hoje durante um um espectáculo roubaram as nossas Brompton, uma laranja e outra vermelha e prata, em Vila do Conde."
Divulguem pff e se virem alguma parecida ou igual contactem-me. Se virem alguma à venda ou peças como as descritas contactem-me tb pff.
Muito obrigada!

Bicicleta Roubada XX


22.08.2014: BIKE ROUBADA - PEUGEOT TENNIS CLUB MIXTE

Roubada na manhã de 22.08, no Parque das Nações.

Guiador bullhorn com grips (fitas) brancas, 6 velocidades, desviador simplex traseiro branco, manetes de travão de plástico branco, rodas 28 com pneus finos de ciclismo (a dianteira marca Decathlon com pneu Michelin preto, a traseira é branca da Maillard com pneu Continental Sport de borracha preta), pedais de plataforma (tipo BMX) pretos e pedaleira Sachs de 46 dentes.
Foi roubada na manhã de 22.08.2014, do atrio exterior do Hotel Arts, no Parque das Nações, ainda que estivesse presa com cadeado. 
Divulguem pff e se virem alguma parecida ou igual contactem-me. Se virem alguma à venda ou peças como as descritas contactem-me tb pff.
Obrigada!

Bicicleta roubada XIX


"Infelizmente, a minha bicicleta foi roubada do Bike Park do Rock in Rio hoje à noite. Infelizmente, enganaram as minhas colegas voluntárias. Felizmente, ninguém se magoou e amanhã irei apresentar queixa na polícia. Mas não queria deixar de partilhar convosco esta fotografia. Se a virem por algum lado avisem-me... PS: O sinal mais distintivo neste momento é que a forquilha/garfo está danificado e a precisar de substituição... E os punhos estão todos esfolados".

Bicicleta roubada XVII

""ROUBO DE BICICLETA” 
Por: Fernando Baptista de Oliveira
Caros amigos e companheiros, hoje dia 20 de Junho, cerca das 09:00 horas da manhã, foi-me roubada a minha bicicleta.
Estava amarrada a um sinal de trânsito, na Av. Afonso III, junto ao Posto Médico.
Já participei à PSP.
Em anexo uma foto para uma melhor identificação.
A bicicleta é MASIL, de cor azul, com guiador de passeio, guarda-lamas e suporte traseiro.
Se por acaso a virem (????????????) agradeço, participem às autoridades e a mim, ou Núcleo Cicloturismo de Alvalade.
Muito obrigado"


On the Road

The author, with her bicycle
After my 6-year-old son died, I was determined to grieve on my own terms. So I sold all my belongings and set off on my bicycle
"My son, Vasu died of cancer on August 19, 2009. He was 6 years old.
I was aware before he died what his death could do to me. Vasu got sick in the fall of 2004, and two months later my mom was also diagnosed with cancer. She died a month after he went into remission.
V and Snowman
Vasu, with a snowman
After Mom’s death, I only left the house to go to the grocery store, Vasu’s preschool, and the children’s hospital for his check-ups. Chance encounters with people I knew left me breathless with panic and desperate to return home. People explained that “the first year is the worst” and that I would “heal with time,” but that made no sense to me. Grief was a road I was forced onto, a place in-between living and dying. More than two years after Mom died I was still traveling the same road.
Then in a single day everything changed.
I was sitting in the kitchen with my dad. He explained that two years on he still couldn’t live without Mom. He wanted to follow her. He wanted to be dead.
“I know this sounds strange,” I replied, “but I think I already am.”
For the rest of the day I played with Vasu and saw him through the eyes of someone who had died, and realized I no longer wanted to be dead. In that moment I stepped off the road of grief. I started to smile and even laugh. I didn’t have to pretend to be happy — I was happy.
Two months later, the doctors found metastasized tumors throughout Vasu’s body. He survived the nine-month treatment, but would never go into remission again.
I knew that if I could lose years to sorrow after Mom’s death, the death of my only child could steal away my life. As Vasu was dying, nearly everyone confirmed this. “What you are going through is the worst thing a mother could possibly experience,” they said. But I didn’t want to believe them. I wanted something different. I didn’t want to grieve for the rest of my life.
For Vasu’s memorial we invited the community to build a giant sandcastle on his favorite beach. It was a fortress when finished; 20 feet long with a deep moat. Then, because Vasu would have wanted it that way, we asked all of his friends to jump on it.
Afterwards, I said goodbye to everyone I knew, including Vasu’s daddy. We had shared 13 years together, 6 of them raising our child. But we had nothing left to offer each other except tears and pain. I sold everything I owned except an old mountain bike and camping gear, and on October 1 I began cycling the Pacific Coast Bike Route.
I quickly became comfortable with the challenges of the road: the shattered glass, the narrow shoulders, and the bellow of air brakes and blast of air in the wake of tractor-trailers. My body adapted to my new life much faster than my grief did. My legs bulged with new muscle after barely two weeks, and when I removed the 45 pounds of gear draped over the wheels my bicycle became ridiculously light.I cycled every other day on the narrow shoulder of Highway 101. I was a refugee, fleeing the sorrow that pursued me. At the end of every day I sat beside the ocean. It was large enough to hold the grief that overwhelmed me — and the fierce fall winds and blistering sand cleansed my heart for a while.
But whenever I thought about Vasu, no matter what memory I searched for, it was always usurped by his last breaths; his still, cold face. I became so accustomed to the images of his last moments that I no longer hid my tears and sobbing breaths when strangers walked past me on the shore. The wilderness gave me privacy that friends and family would have taken away. The ocean did not expect me to be strong or heroic. It didn’t even need me to survive. I was allowed to be a grieving mother, and could take my time to find the end of the road.
I cycled for two months, and along the way I graduated from refugee to pilgrim.
It’s been more than four years since I ended my ride down the coast. The memories of Vasu’s death began to fade soon after I turned back and headed home. I was free to remember him happy. I also brought back with me a desire to create a new language for grief — one that acknowledges that there is no roadmap through loss, and that everyone’s road is unique.
Elea Acheson began writing about grief a few weeks after her bicycle ride ended. She is looking for a publisher for her completed memoir. She continues her pilgrimage through grief at eleaacheson.com  and facebook.com/EleadariAcheson."

Fonte e imagem: http://modernloss.com/road/

Bicicleta roubada XVI


"Ontem como habitual deixei a minha bicla no parque de bicicletas junto à entrada do metro na P. Espanha. Deixei às 07h30 e às 14h40 como chovia vim para casa e deixei a bicla para mais tarde. Acabou por passar lá a noite e hoje passei de carro às 10h30 e ainda lá estava, pensei passar mais tarde para a trazer às 12h30 voltei com a minha mulher. A bicla já não estava lá."

Cycling has become a big deal in Europe

Everyone can: People in Paris can cycle commute using a public bike share service known as Velib.
in The Star Online, 15.03.2014

"With the economic slow down in Europe, it’s becoming more practical – and fashionable – to cycle. 


PEDALS versus horsepower, two wheels against four: More bicycles were sold than cars in 26 of the European Union’s 28 members, the exceptions being Belgium and Luxembourg, according to data from the cycle industry body Coliped and the auto industry association ACEA.
Car sales have been slumping since the start of Europe’s economic crisis, in what the head of FIAT Sergio Marchionne has gloomily dubbed a “Carmageddon“, settling at 12 million units for the EU (excluding Malta).
By contrast bikes have proved pretty much crisis-proof with 19.7 million sold Europe-wide in 2012 according to Coliped.
The phenomenon spreads well beyond the traditional “bicycle capitals” of northern Europe, Amsterdam and Copenhagen. In southern European countries – many of them traditionally car-mad – the shift is striking, with Italians buying 1.6 million bikes against 1.4 million cars in 2012.
“The economic crisis has had an impact on all areas of people’s lives, including on transport,” said Giulietta Pagliaccio, head of the Italian cycling federation Fiab. “But there has also been a small revolution in terms of lifestyle.”

More people in Europe are cycling, including British designer Vivienne Westwood.
 
Italy’s cycle manufacturer Bianchi agrees that change is on the march.
“Customers these days want bikes they can commute with, and top of the range. They are looking for long-term investments,” said Bianchi’s head Bob Ippolito, whose firm recently branched out into electric bikes.
“That backs up the sense that people are turning away from cars.”
Milan has been one of the latest European cities to roll out a bike-sharing scheme, dubbed “Bikemi”, on the model of the Parisian “Velib”, as well as extending its network of cycle lanes.
For the Bucharest in-crowd, cycling is now the way to roll, with fashionable bars featuring bicycles as design objects and collective bike rides staged on a weekly basis.
In Spain, 780,000 bikes were sold in 2012 against 700,000 cars, in spite of complaints from bike users who say the country’s cities remain dangerous on two wheels.
Madrid is rolling out a new bike rental scheme next year, and has unveiled plans for a “green ring” of cycle paths looping 10 kilometres around the city centre.
According to Spain’s road traffic agency, while the number of cyclists is steady, they are using their bikes more and more often. Cycle use for everyday journeys has jumped from 17 to 30 percent.
In austerity-hit Portugal cyclist numbers are on the rise in cities like Lisbon and Porto, although not so much in the country’s mountainous regions. Bike sales reached 350,000, against just over 95,000 cars.
“There are more and more people cycling, as a fashion thing, but also for economic reasons,” said Pedro Carvalho, head of the magazine “B-Cultura de Bicicleta”.
On the streets of London, bicycles are now as common a sight as black cabs or red double-decker buses, with journeys by bike up 66 percent over a decade.
The city is now under pressure to provide more safe, segregated cycle lanes, and there is a pledge to invest 1.2 billion euros (RM5.5 billion) over the next decade in cycling infrastructure.
As young Europeans switch to two wheels in droves, the car may be losing some of its appeal as a status symbol.
That was certainly true for 23-year-old Parisian Hugo Clair, who gave up his car and replaced it with two bicycles.
“With fuel costs going up, it was really grating to have to spend 100 euros a month just to keep a car on the road.” – AFP"

Fonte e imagens: http://www.thestar.com.my/Travel/Europe/2014/03/15/Cycling-has-become-a-big-deal-in-Europe/

How do bike-sharing schemes shape cities?

"NEXT month a so-called "brand new means of transport" will be launched in Copenhagen: the bicycle. GoBike, Europe's latest bike-sharing scheme, will have bicycles with built-in tablet computers that direct cyclists to the best local restaurants, show offers in nearby shops and give the latest train times. Bike-sharing is shifting up a gear: it seems that nearly every self-respecting mayor is either developing a scheme or announcing an expansion to one. What is the impact on cities' development?
Bike-sharing began in the 1960s when 50 "free bikes" were scattered around Amsterdam. They were promptly stolen. But after this slow start bike-sharing has blossomed. Over the past decade the number of schemes has increased tenfold. Bike-sharing ventures now exist in more than 500 cities, from Dubai to Hawaii. Each works on the simple principle that a user can borrow a bike at a docking station and then return it to another. The first 30 minutes are usually free. The most successful schemes have large fleets of bikes, lots of small docking stations and a few "superdocks" in busy places, such as train stations. Electronic monitoring of the bikes can show ebbs and flows of bike traffic through cities, allowing better distribution of bikes and planning of new docks.
Just as mass public transport changed the development of cities' suburbs, bike-hire schemes are now shaping city centres in subtle ways. A "cycling census" in London found that in the morning rush-hours nearly half of all northbound traffic crossing three of the city's main bridges was made up of cyclists. Planners have responded by criss-crossing the city with cycle-paths; more are proposed. Some mayors are experimenting with bike-only days: Mexico City, the unlikely home of a highly popular bike-hire scheme, closes its central eight-lane highway to cars every Sunday, to the rage of motorists. Property developers are taking note, too: just as houses near metro stations tend to command higher prices, research now suggests that access to cycle paths and proximity to docking points is linked to higher rents. Finally, bike-sharing opens up parts of cities that were previously hard to access by public transport, especially late at night when bus and train services get thinner. Research by Susan Shaheen at the University of California, Berkeley, found that in Montreal and Toronto four out of ten people shopped more at locations near bike stations. In Washington, DC, more than eight out of ten said they were more likely to visit a business, shop or restaurant with easy access to bike-sharing dock.
Just as researchers begin to grasp the impact of bike-sharing, the schemes themselves continue to evolve at speed. New developments include much cheaper "dockless" bikes, already in use in Berlin, which can be found by mobile phone. Another promising development is the introduction of electric bikes, for longer or steeper journeys. Such innovations could help broaden the appeal of bike-share schemes beyond their current users, who are mainly young, relatively well-off men. Bike sharing is just one part of a broader movement towards alternative forms of transport in increasingly crowded cities, but it could be an important one. As last year’s United States Conference of Mayors concluded: "communities that have invested in pedestrian and bicycle projects have benefited from improved quality of life, healthier population, greater local real-estate values, more local travel choices, and reduced air pollution." Time for more of the world to go Dutch."

Transporte de Bicicletas no Metropolitano de Lisboa


"Pode-se transportar bicicletas no Metro, no máximo de duas bicicletas por carruagem, desde que não se verifiquem grandes aglomerações de passageiros nem seja perturbado o normal funcionamento do sistema".

Fonte e imagem: http://www.metrolisboa.pt/informacao/viajar-no-metro/utilizacao-do-metro/

Bicicleta roubada XV


Bicicleta Órbita, roubada no interior de um prédio em frente à Assembleia da República.
(Hoje: 05.09.2013)

Car-free in cities where driving is king

Brian Poole, in Vancouver, ditched his car for a monthly bus pass and his bicycle. (Michelle Ty)

By Alina Dizik
"As hourly car rentals, taxi-hailing apps and car-sharing services become more popular, some drivers are finding ownership unnecessary.

Robust public transportation and easy access to necessities, coupled with the high costs of everything from tolls to parking have long led to car-free living in places like New York, Singapore and many European capitals. But, emerging transport options — think Uber, Halo, RelayRides and Zipcar — are spreading to cities where having a car had been a near-necessity. At the same time, the cost of car ownership is rising. In the last year, maintenance costs in the United States for a vehicle rose 11.3%, while insurance premiums rose 2.7%, according to the American Automobile Association’s 2013 Your Driving Costs. The average cost to operate a vehicle in the US was $8,946 in 2012 and that figure is even in higher outside the US in expanding metropolises such as Shanghai and Sao Paolo.
All told, these developments have made the decision to ditch four wheels an easier one, even in cities where being car-free was nearly unthinkable in the past. And in the US, many people are driving far less than they have in the last six decades, according to a study released in May by the United States Public Interest Research Group, a liberal-leaning public policy research and advocacy non-profit. The study found that people age 16 to 36 drove 23% fewer miles on average in 2009 than they did eight years earlier, and the group expects that trend to continue.
Of course, living without a car can mean dealing with unexpected public transport problems and can require more route-planning. But there is a financial upside beyond ditching a car payment and other costs, said Manisha Thakor, a personal finance expert and founder of MoneyZen Wealth Management in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Since most car-free people pay out-of-pocket each time they need to get somewhere, it makes the transportation spending process a more conscious decision, Thakor explains.
Here former car owners share how they manage being car-free and save money in four cities:

Los Angeles
There are few cities more associated with car-driving than Los Angeles, with its 527 miles of freeways. The city’s 3.9 million residents drive almost 2.5 million vehicles, according to the Los Angeles Department of Transportation. But earlier this year John Kisha, 65, president of Dandy Lion Hosting, a webhosting company, went car-free.
Why he did it: After four years of owning an ultra-compact Smart Car, Kisha realized his maintenance costs were rising, to an estimated $800 this year. Including insurance, gas and car payments, Kisha spent about $700 per month. When a Zipcar lot opened up nearby, he decided to switch gears. Los Angeles has a bus and subway system that works efficiently in some areas, said Kisha, who lives in West Hollywood. “My office and where I live is on the same bus line,” he said, adding that his commute time has not grown.
What he spends now: When Kisha has doctor’s appointments, he uses a city-sponsored medical transportation company for free. For taxis, he buys a booklet of coupons for $8 good for $40 worth of rides each month. If he travels overnight, Kisha rents from a traditional car rental company. He uses Zipcar to rent hourly for work appointments. Since ditching his car, he has not spent more than $350 on transportation each month, even though he rents a car two to four times per week.
Biggest hassle: The amount of planning ahead required. “It can be a bit harder to be spontaneous,” Kisha said.
Annual savings: $10,000, most of which goes toward long-term investment or travel.

Cabrils, Spain
Cabrils, a municipality of 7,000 people about 30 km from Barcelona, does not seem a likely place to live without a car. But, Jacobo Pedrosa, 30, a children’s app developer at LilyMedia, is one of a small but growing number of people living in smaller towns outside of Barcelona who are giving it a go.
Why he did it: In 2011, when Pedrosa’s five-year-old Renault needed heavy maintenance and required hours of work at about 40 euros ($51) per hour, he decided to sell. “I didn’t need to drive,” he said. Taxes for car ownership were already costly and he was spending about 2,000 euros ($2,587) on maintenance and 3,000 euros ($3,881) for gas each year. As a web developer he could work from home and didn’t need to drive to an office each day, and could walk most places around the seaside town.
What he spends now: Getting to Barcelona now requires a bus and train ride that costs 6 euros ($8). It takes an hour longer than driving and Pedrosa makes the trip at least once a week. Twice a month, Pedrosa rents a car for weekend outings and spends about 40 euros ($51), plus the cost of gas. Friends sometimes give him a lift to social gatherings, he said.
Biggest hassle: The time it takes to get to Barcelona to meet with clients.
Annual savings: 4,100 euros ($5,255), which he spends on other experiences, such as dining out and activities with friends.

Vancouver, Canada
Car ownership costs CAD$7,500 (approximately equivalent to USD) on average in Canadian cities such as Vancouver. Even so, most people still depend on their cars as the main form of transport in Canada’s cities. But for Brian Poole, 28, a nonprofit project manager and personal finance blogger, simple math led him to ditch his car.
Why he did it: After graduating from college in 2008 and landing his first job, Poole bought a used car for CAD$4,000. A year later he decided to do the math on alternate transport options. He realized he could cut his costs — more than CAD$400 per month on maintenance, gas and insurance -- in half by renting cars by the day. Poole sold his car in 2010. “It took me a while to come around to the idea that I didn’t need to have a car,” he said.
What he spends now: Poole now uses Modo Car Co-op, a Vancouver-based car share service that allows members to rent vehicles by the hour from other members. Poole also started using Car2Go, which allows customers to return rental cars in a different place than the pick-up location. For daily transit, he depends on a CAD$42 monthly bus pass and his bicycle. Poole’s total monthly transport budget is CAD$200, with about CAD$150 going toward car-sharing services. For groceries, he walks to local supermarkets, but doesn’t buy in bulk.
Biggest hassle: Booking a car on short notice. “If there’s not a car around, there’s not much alternative,” he said.
Annual savings: CAD$2,400, which now goes into retirement savings and other investment accounts.

London
In London, about 60% of people own a car, but Amalia Pacquola, 32, implementation manager at a financial firm, isn’t one of them — despite her slightly unusual transportation requirements.
Why she did it: After driving most her life, Pacquola moved to London from Australia six years ago. But the prospect of owning a car in a city known for its traffic jams was daunting. In a city where car-related expenses can top 20% of annual income -- gas prices are high and commuters pay a £10 ($15) daily congestion fee, for instance -- owning a car costs upward of £8,000 ($12,187) per year. Instead, she became a member of Streetcar, an hourly-rental service acquired by Zipcar in 2010. Pacquaola often makes large cakes for weddings and birthdays as a side hobby, and rents vehicles to transport the desserts.
What she spends now: In a typical month, Pacquaola spends £90 ($137) on public transport and £60 ($304) on hourly car rentals, which average £8 ($12) per hour, she said. Occasional taxis can cost £15 ($23) per trip. In the last three months, she’s rented a car every weekend, but said in a city like London that still makes more financial sense because of parking restrictions. “It’s a lot less stressful,” she said. On weekdays, she takes the Tube to work.
Biggest hassles: Having to adjust mirrors and seat when driving rental cars and not forgetting any personal items when she returns the rental.
Annual savings: £5,720 ($8,732), mostly used to travel outside the country for at least one long weekend per month".

Fonte e imagem: http://www.bbc.com/capital/story/20130523-living-car-free-to-save-money

Bicicleta roubada XIV

"Bemmequer Vegetariano (Lisboa)
Alguém a viu? Roubaram a bicicleta amarela .
Estava mesmo à porta do bem me quer com livros e com um cadeado preso à parede ..... Se a virem por aí avisem me ou a policia ... Por favor. Ajudem a divulgar."

How to bike in the city (tips for the bicycle curious)



Video created by Daniel Penner / @heypenner

"You say you want to get around the city without spending the $9,000 to maintain and operate a car each year, and maybe get some exercise while you're at it? You don't have that kind of cash. And you know, the planet. But those bike lanes can look pretty intimidating, with all the mustachioed hipsters on their superbad fixies, the spandex-clad adrenaline junkies, and the cars whizzing by".

Bicicleta roubada XIII

"Roubaram a minha bicicleta de montanha amarela, que estava presa dentro da Faculdade de Belas Artes.
Não era valiosa, mas tinha um certo valor sentimental e tinha muito investimento em cima.
Não sei que cadeado tinha, eu tinha emprestado a bicicleta a um amigo.
Se alguém a vir ou souber de alguma coisa... provavelmente devem vendê-a com o suporte preto atrás e com os avanços de punho.
O travão de trás do lado esquerdo desencaixa-se se for puxado (tem o parafuso que o prende ao quadro partido lá dentro). O pneu da frente é liso e o de trás é cardado".