Bicycle counter


Bicycle counters are electronic devices that detect the number of bicycles at a location for a certain period of time. They are sometimes referred to as bicycle barometers, but the term is misleading because it indicates the measurement of pressure. Most counting stations only consist of a sensor and some use a display to show the total number of cyclists of the day and the current year. There are counting stations all over the world in over hundreds of cities, for example in Manchester, Zagreb, or in Portland. The first bicycle counting station was installed in Odense, Denmark, in 2002.

Persuasive Aspects

Bicycle counters are mainly being installed to assist city planning with reliable data on the development of bicycle usage. Bicycle counting stations are said to raise awareness for cycling as a mode of transportation, encourage more people to use their bicycles and give cyclists acknowledgement. There has been no representative study on the impact of bicycle counters on citizens or by-passers, but some early empirical clues that urban visualizations can "become appropriate communication media for sharing, discussing, and co-producing socially relevant data".
To increase visibility, bicycle counters are mostly installed at positions with high traffic volume and visibility to a range of road users.
They have been called urban visualizations and fulfill certain criteria of ambient intelligence, such as being embedded, context-aware and adaptive. Bicycle counting stations can be described as persuasive technology.
"Through sensing technology, a display can act as a tool that increases the capability to capture a behavior ; through its visual imagery, it can function as a medium that provides useful information, such as behavioral statistics or cause-and-effect relationships; and through its networking ability, it can become a social actor, encouraging community-based feedback and social interaction".

Technical Setup

Different techniques are used for detection of bicycles, such as built in induction loops, pneumatic hoses, infrared sensing or cameras. Different setups provide different advantages such as more precise counting, battery life, reduced costs or differentiation between different road users such as cyclists, pedestrians or cars. Pneumatic tube setups are said to have an accuracy of 80%, manufacturers state a 90% accuracy for induction loops

Data

Unlike manual counting or other bicycle related interventions or citizen science, where citizens manually put in data, bicycle counting stations automatically generate citizen related data. Automatic counting systems are said to be cheaper than manual counting by people. Because of the use of communication technology in the urban context, bicycle counters can be counted as smart city technology, urban informatics or urban computing. Most of the actors who install bicycle counters, provide the number of cyclists as open data.

Criticism

There has been criticism on the precision of the counting and on the cost of bicycle counters as a waste of tax money.