Here is how the life of bicycles in China evolved!
While bicycles were cloistered away from prying eyes in the foreign concessions and colonies of east China, thousands living in the western and northern parts of the country had seen these marvelous contraptions – all thanks to the improbable road trip of a pair of mustachioed American college grads.
In the years following the departure of two Americans, bicycles began making inroads among Beijing’s biggest figures. The Guangxu Emperor, who was under house arrest following a coup by Empress Dowager Cixi in 1898, one day attempted to ride the bicycle his eunuch had spotted in the possession of a foreign doctor within the Forbidden City. The ride was not successful – “his queue had become entangled in the rear wheel, and that he had a not very royal tumble, and had given up – as many another one has done,” wrote the doctor’s husband.
Where the Guangxu Emperor failed, however, the Xuantong Emperor (more commonly known as Puyi) succeeded. Two decades after Allen and Sachtleben dazzled China’s citizenry with their bikes, workers within the Forbidden City were prying out the ankle-high wooden dividers between rooms within the emperor’s residency so he could more easily ride his bicycle between them. And the last emperor’s enthusiasm for all things bike was only the beginning of what would become a national obsession.
The following photo shows a bike shop in the 1970’s. Notice the style of bicycles that are being sold in this store. They are bicycles built for everyday city riding in regular clothes, featuring chain guards, bells, fenders, and sit in the upright position.
That’s how wide the bike lanes were in 1986 compared to the amount of space provided to motor vehicles. This bike lane appears to be at least 3 car lanes wide, or perhaps even 4, and this is just for bicycle traffic in a single direction.
During the 1990’s, car culture began sweeping over China. In this 1998 photo you can see traffic signals and an increasing number of motor vehicles. But bicycles were still king in the “bicycle kingdom”. It wouldn’t be until the 2000’s that cars began to really overtake bicycles in China.
In 2017, bike sharing took off in China, with dozens of bike-share companies quickly flooding city streets with millions of brightly colored rental bicycles. However, the rapid growth vastly outpaced immediate demand and overwhelmed Chinese cities, where infrastructure and regulations were not prepared to handle a sudden flood of millions of shared bicycles….