Day 1: Wednesday 30th of October

8:00    Morning coffee and registration

9:00    Opening

9:30    Session 1: Experimentation and mobility behaviour

1.1

Children’s mobility behavior and influences in their perceptions of the city: An Experiment at NEMO Science Museum

Manuela Torres and Marco te Brömmelstroet

1.2

Does your attitude change after exposure? Evidence from a pilot with e-bikes at TU Delft

Danique Ton, Dorine Duives, Kees van Goeverden, Cathelijn Dijk-Koekkoek and Serge Hoogendoorn

1.3

Mobility Choices of Future Generations in the Netherlands: Testing the Mobile Game

Manuela Torres, Roya Shokoohi and Gerd Weitkamp

10:45  Break

11:00  Workshop 1: Cycle Walk by Meredith Glaser

12:30 Lunch

13:30  Session 2: Impacts of electrification

2.1

Substitution effects of the e-bike. Evidence from longitudinal travel data from the Netherlands Mobility Panel (MPN) using a RI-CLPM

Mathijs de Haas, Maarten Kroesen, Caspar Chorus, Sascha Hoogendoorn-Lanser & Serge Hoogendoorn

2.2

Transition to faster cycling: feelings of unsafety connected to the speed pedelec

Maria Salomons

14:20 Break

14:40 Session 3: Bicycle highways and their impacts

3.1

To what extent do cycling highways increase bicycle commuting speed?

Roeland Houkes and Joris Klingen

3.2

Why take the longer route? Cycle highway user experience and route choice in Eindhoven, the Netherlands

George Liu, Oana Druta, Marco te Brömmelstroet and Pieter van Wesemael

15:30  Break

16:15 Session 4: Innovations in data collection and its implications

4.1

Understanding cycling behaviour through large-scale experiments

Alexandra Gavriilidou

4.2

Co-creation of bicycle parking infrastructure: experiences and results from the Altona Mobility Lab

Kimberly Tatum, Andre Landwehr, Jonas Fischer and Joerg Knieling

4.3

Seeing Like a Bike: Eye Tracking and “Stress”

April Gadsby and Kari Watkins

17:30 End of day 1

 

Day 2: Thursday November 1st, 2019

8:30    Morning coffee

9:00    Session 5: Planning and policy

5.1

Bicycle Accessibility Planning: towards an equitable approach

Isabel Cunha and Cecília Silva

5.2

Multiplex Urban Fingerprints for Bicycle Network Planning

Luis Natera Orozco, Federico Battiston, Gerardo Iñiguez and Michael Szell

5.3

Mapping the Gross Potential for Cycling: a tool to support planning for cycling in starter cities

Cecília Silva, Joana Marques, Tamara Bicalho and Ana Dias

5.4

Cycle highway: concept and benchmark

Gabriel Jose Cabral Dias and Paulo Jorge Gomes Ribeiro

  -

Short briefing on cycling experiment

Winnie Daamen

10:40  Break

11:00  Action time: Cycling experiment @ Leeghwaterstraat

12:30 Lunch

13:30  Session 6: Cycling research, practice and policy

6.1

Not seeing the forest for the trees? Some thoughts on the overproduction of cycling research

Samuel Nello-Deakin

6.2

The return of the old? The contrast and confluence of 1970’s and present day Dutch cycling advocacy and policy

Matthew Bruno, Henk-Jan Dekker and Letícia Lindenberg Lemos 

6.3

The Impact of Cycling Research: Connecting Science and Practice

Lara-Britt Zomer et al.

15:00 Break

15:25 Keynote Marjan Hagenzieker

            Cycling safety & some chicken and egg stories

16:15  Break

16:30 Session 7: Bicycle safety research

7.1

Objective data on the overtaking behaviour of motorized vehicles in cyclists with and without a child on the same bicycle

Toon Ampe, Bas de Geus and Ian Walker

7.2

An Grounded Theory-Driven Observational Method for Coding Interactions and Analyzing the Safety of Bicycle Infrastructure

Cat Silva

7.3

Does the law affect whether bicyclists perceive phone use in traffic as a safety risk? - A survey study in Denmark and the Netherlands

Rebecca Brandt, Mette Møller, Sonja Haustein and Marjan Hagenzieker

7.4

Risk perception associated with cycling infrastructure, policies and experience

Zain Ul Abdin and Hans De Backer

18:10 Conference drinks and walking dinner (on location)

21:30 End of day 2

 

Day 3: Friday November 2nd, 2019

8:30    Morning coffee

9:00    Session 8: Accessibility, attractiveness and empirics

8.1

User preferences for bicycle infrastructure in communities with emerging cycling cultures

Kari Watkis

8.2

The basic level of bicycle accessibility

Florian Schneider, Winnie Daamen and Serge Hoogendoorn

 9:00    Session 9: Bike sharing part I

 

9.1

Empirical Evidence on the Role of Bikesharing in Reducing Car Use

João Teixeira, Cecília Silva and Frederico Moura E Sá

9.2

Bike Share - finding the sweet spot to disrupt

Charles Carey

10:40  Break

11:00  Workshop 2: The combined bicycle and transit mode

          Paul vd Coevering, Joost de Kruijf, Danique Ton and Niels van Oort

12:30 Lunch

13:30  Session 10: Operations and control

10.1

Red-light Running Behaviour of Takeout Bicycles Based on Survival Analysis

Xing Gao, Jing Zhao and Hang Gao

10.2

Green signal countdown timers for bicycle traffic – Results from a field study

Heather Kaths, Georgios Grigoropoulos and Klaus Krämer

10.3

Cycling flows and cyclist behaviors in a busy intersection in Milan

Stefano D'Armento 

10.4

Evaluation of a Traffic Signal Coordination for Bicycles in a Mixed Motor Vehicle and Public Transport Urban Network

Georgios Grigoropoulos, Stefan Marco Maximilian Kazakovtsev, Heather Kaths and Klaus Krämer

15:10 Break

15:30 Session 11: Bike sharing part II

11.1

The case of the Trojan bike: theorising ITC-enabled dockless Public Bike Sharing as a vehicle for creating and harvesting behavioural surplus

Justin Spinney and Wen-I Lin

11.2

Ridership impacts of the introduction of a dockless bike-sharing scheme, a data-driven case study

Sven Boor, Niels van Oort, Ronald Haverman, and Serge Hoogendoorn

11.3

Understanding the Modal Shift in Response to Bike-sharing Systems in the City of Delft
Xinwei Ma, Yufei Yuan, Niels van Oort and Serge Hoogendoorn

16:45  Conference closing, award ceremony and announcement next host CRB

17:30 End of CRB