Skip to main content

World cities drive change on Car-Free Day

A global event which aims to shift cars off the road and encourage people onto alternative transport modes takes place on Sunday. World Car-Free Day 2019 gives metropolitan areas from Bangkok, Thailand to Reykjavik, Iceland, the opportunity to stop traffic and open their streets to pedestrians and cyclists. While some cities, including Vancouver, Canada and Berlin, Germany, hold car-free days at other times of the year, the weekend will see a number of events. In Washington, DC, it is hosted by Commut
September 20, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

A global event which aims to shift cars off the road and encourage people onto alternative transport modes takes place on Sunday.

World Car-Free Day 2019 gives metropolitan areas from Bangkok, Thailand to Reykjavik, Iceland, the opportunity to stop traffic and open their streets to pedestrians and cyclists. While some cities, including Vancouver, Canada and Berlin, Germany, hold car-free days at other times of the year, the weekend will see a number of events.

In Washington, DC, it is hosted by Commuter Connections and will be celebrated over three days, with people encouraged to “take the pledge, even if you’re already car free”.

Paris is also celebrating on Sunday, but the French capital’s first four arrondissements are already closed to automobile traffic one Sunday per month.

In the UK, large areas of central London will be closed, with 6352 Santander Cycles free to hire across the whole of the capital for 24 hours as part of the ‘Reimagine’ festival.

However, a new white paper - Kicking the UK’s car habit - reveals that 44% of the British population claim ‘nothing’ would induce them to give up their private car. Commissioned by 5957 Ito World, the research finds that just 5% of those who say they could be persuaded to do so cited ‘concern for the environment’ as a reason for ditching their car.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Croix-Rousse demonstrates art of tunnel safety
    December 6, 2018
    How do you expand a tunnel when it has reached its traffic limit? Build another tunnel in parallel to it. That, at least, is what Lyon did and opened the 1.7km Croix-Rousse dual-tunnel system in 2013. The smaller, new €283 million tunnel has become a symbol of Lyon’s intention to reinvent itself as one of France’s most innovative mobility centres, said Mathieu Hermen, head of operations at La Metropole de Lyon. Construction of the original two-lane tunnel under one of the city’s most densely populated arro
  • Stage is set for ITS America Annual Meeting
    May 18, 2012
    ITS America has announced that on Monday it will hold a key discussion event concerning intelligent transportation and its role in helping to solve America’s infrastructure crisis with national leaders including Ursula Burns, chairman and CEO of Xerox; Chris Vein, deputy White House chief technology officer; Robert Brown, Ford Motor Company’s VP of sustainability, environment and safety engineering; and Martin Thall, Verizon’s VP - telematics. This is just one of numerous sessions examining ways to bring in
  • Air quality tops transportation agendas
    November 17, 2014
    Colin Sowman catches up on some of the latest research around outdoor pollution and looks at options available to authorities in areas of poor air quality. Iair quality hasn’t already reached the top of the agenda in transportation department meetings in your area, it probably soon will with national, trans-national and even global bodies calling for authorities to reduce pollution levels.
  • Pride & joy & pushback
    June 26, 2023
    Solidarity, celebration – and some disquiet. Support for the LGBTQ+ community among businesses has provoked a variety of responses. Adam Hill looks at the ITS industry’s reaction to Pride month