Those are great stories, thanks for sharing them with us.
This has absolutely no basis from a scientific standpoint, but when I lived in Paris in 1999-2000, I found people to be in a big hurry all the time, and they hardly ever smiled. They ran red lights and the pedestrians walked regardless of the light. There were a few bike commuters on the streets, but not as many as you would expect for a big Euro city. I had a bike, but I rarely rode it because I just didn't feel safe in traffic there (I've been riding for 25+ years).
Now, Paris has a wonderful network of bike lanes and an incredible bike-sharing program called Velib. When I was there in May, I rode my bike every day to get around. At every stoplight, there were probably 5-6 cyclists with me. Everyone--bikes, cars, scooters, busses, even taxis and pedestrians--paid attention to the traffic signals (for the most part). People seemed so much more relaxed and just in a better mood!
And the best thing is that I saw more of Paris on my bike in May than I had when I lived there for 6 months years ago. Back then, I took the Metro everywhere, and missed everything above ground.
I found that bikes had improved the city tremendously.



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So the bike share program there had to have a truck service to redistribute the collection of too many shared bikes left at bottom of hills.
