Episode 4: A Brief History Of The American Sharrow

It may come as a surprise, but in some circles of the bike world, sharrows are a source of passionate debate. Are they a lip service from cities hoping to appease cyclists without spending any money or political capital? Are they a viable form of safe infrastructure? In this episode, we trace the origins of sharrows back to their inventor James Mackay, P.E., a former Denver bike planner and talk to bike advocate Noah Budnick and University of Denver, Colorado professor Wes Marshall to look at the evolution of biking and bike infrastructure in America over the last 25 years.

Music:
“Bicycle,” “Night Cave,” “Finding the Balance”
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

7 Responses to Episode 4: A Brief History Of The American Sharrow

  1. Pingback: American Sharrow Inventor: “I Was Always Under Pressure to Do Less” | Streetsblog USA

  2. Pingback: Listen: The Bicycle Story podcast takes on the history of the sharrow | Seattle Bike Blog

  3. Pingback: Lies, Damn Lies and Sharrows – Sudbury Moves

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