Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycle. Show all posts
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Kyoto Cycle Tour Project Kinkakuji
The branch of Kyoto Cycle Tour Project near Kinkakuji Temple is useful if you want to tour western Kyoto: Kinkakuji, Ryoanji and Ninnaji but only if you want to do that tour in the morning at the shop closes at 1.30pm. Otherwise you have to drop off your bike at one of KCTP's other outlets (see below) before 7pm and pay an extra 800 yen for the pleasure.
The bike I hired was the standard class 1,000 yen a day bone-shaker and was far to small for a 6ft foreigner. Only 2 out of the 3 gears worked and the extra 800 yen drop off charge made the whole deal rather expensive.
Kyoto Cycle Tour Project has other outlets near Kyoto Station near the APA Hotel Ekimae and the Rihga Royal Hotel at Nishiki-kita (at the Hotel Co-op Inn) and Fushimi (at Urban Hotel). An alternative rental shop near Kyoto Station is Miyakoshiki Fuune, where visitors can rent battery-assisted bicycles.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Bicycle Parking in Tokyo
東京の駐輪所
Like people all over Japan, there are a lot of people cycling in Tokyo. Most Tokyo cyclists are riders of what is colloquially called the mama-chari, or "mom bike": the plain jane descendant of the original safety bike. These very often have a child seat on the back, front or both front and back, and increasingly incorporate a small auxiliary electric engine.
Bicycle riders in Japan should, legally, ride on the road, but road riders tend to be those with faster, leaner bikes with ten or more gears, or fixed gear racing bikes. Most Tokyo cyclists ride on the sidewalk, and somehow manage to usually make it through even quite densely populated sidewalks without collision.
An ongoing bone of contention between local authorities and shopkeepers on the one hand, and cyclists on the other, in Tokyo is bicycle parking. Official pay-for bicycle parking spaces are few and far between, giving cyclists who are typically shoppers no option but to park their bike on the sidewalk. This sometimes results in notices being pinned to bikes stating that the bike will be removed and disposed of by a certain date. In many cases it it resolved by direct action by the aggrieved tenant of the property the bike is parked in front of by moving it somewhere else - often purposely remote - or, if it is locked to a railing, even by vandalizing it, e.g. slashing the tires.
The problem of bicycle parking in Tokyo has started to be addressed anew recently, it seems. There has been a noticeable increase in recent months in the number of coin-operated bicycle parks, which removes the excuse of absence of facilities able to be appealed to by parking transgressors, and, hopefully, will become a source of revenue for the construction of further such facilities.
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bicycle
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Like people all over Japan, there are a lot of people cycling in Tokyo. Most Tokyo cyclists are riders of what is colloquially called the mama-chari, or "mom bike": the plain jane descendant of the original safety bike. These very often have a child seat on the back, front or both front and back, and increasingly incorporate a small auxiliary electric engine.
Bicycle riders in Japan should, legally, ride on the road, but road riders tend to be those with faster, leaner bikes with ten or more gears, or fixed gear racing bikes. Most Tokyo cyclists ride on the sidewalk, and somehow manage to usually make it through even quite densely populated sidewalks without collision.
An ongoing bone of contention between local authorities and shopkeepers on the one hand, and cyclists on the other, in Tokyo is bicycle parking. Official pay-for bicycle parking spaces are few and far between, giving cyclists who are typically shoppers no option but to park their bike on the sidewalk. This sometimes results in notices being pinned to bikes stating that the bike will be removed and disposed of by a certain date. In many cases it it resolved by direct action by the aggrieved tenant of the property the bike is parked in front of by moving it somewhere else - often purposely remote - or, if it is locked to a railing, even by vandalizing it, e.g. slashing the tires.
The problem of bicycle parking in Tokyo has started to be addressed anew recently, it seems. There has been a noticeable increase in recent months in the number of coin-operated bicycle parks, which removes the excuse of absence of facilities able to be appealed to by parking transgressors, and, hopefully, will become a source of revenue for the construction of further such facilities.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan
Tokyo
bicycle
parking
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