We already have many poor people walking home; from industrial area and such. They already transitioned into non-motorised transport for sure - coz transport is very expensive in Nairobi.
Those are exactly the people you want to cater to: the underserved, forgotten, poor masses who don't have the option of paying fares let alone
own private vehicles . They are the majority, it would be more democratic if we catered to them first.
But middle class - that is another culture change - that won't happen soon.
MyCAR is not easy to leave behind.
They said the same about Bogota Colombia before its far sighted mayor built a network of bicycle lanes all over the city, they were wrong, middle class came out in throngs to use it. Look at Paris, or the Netherlands, all moving to non motorized modes of transport. Car centric model of transport is a dead end. We were conditioned to use cars, we can easily be de-conditioned to ditch it.
And Nairobi is pretty congested - so we need SERIOUS MASS transport - metro or subway kind.
All the more to prioritize non motorized transport because you can move the greatest volume of traffic through this mode.
Nairobi has a lot of rivers - with a riparian reserves that can be converted into parks - with lanes for bicyles and walking - and this will be big hit for poor in slums and such areas. And then have NYS manning the whole of it - to ensure security. That will be ideal to deal with foot and bicycle trafffic.
I can get behind this.
It easy to create network of Non Motorised Transport along these rivers......and it touches the poor..who need no incentive to work home.
For example -Kibera resident should follow Mbagathi river all the way down to Industrial area - enjoying the breeze and nature - and far from hustling with cars and motorbikes.
Mathare -resident will also follow the river to Pangani.
Absolutely! They are lots of excellent creative ideas we can use to to reach our goal of congestion free, pleasant city if we are not wedded to certain solutions. Our first reflexive answer to congestion shouldn't be more highways and a costly transit system. Let us think outside the box in short.