A dense crowd of cyclists and pedestrians fills a wide urban boulevard during Bogotá's weekly car-free Ciclovía event.
BOGOTÁ · May 4, 2026 : When Anne Hidalgo and Norman Foster met at Bloomberg CityLab Madrid last week, they reached a clear verdict: the city begins when you get rid of the cars. While Paris has spent twelve years proving this through aggressive policy, Bogotá has lived this reality every Sunday for decades.
The Geometry of Equality
Former Mayor Enrique Peñalosa argued that a bike path from a poor neighborhood to a rich one is a profound symbol of equality. In a city where car ownership was a rigid class marker, reclaiming 127 kilometers of road for the public every Sunday flipped the hierarchy. It proved you don’t need the wealth of a European capital to prioritize people; you just need the conviction to protect that space.

Conviction Over Capital
While Paris retrofits boulevards with massive investment, Bogotá’s model relies on the clever repurposing of existing infrastructure. Every weekend, nearly 2 million citizens fill the asphalt, validating Hidalgo’s core thesis: remove the cars, and the public space instantly fills with life. It is a low-cost, high-impact demonstration of urban transformation now exported to over 100 cities globally.
A Global Blueprint
As Paris moves toward a car-free center, Bogotá remains the enduring proof of concept. The success of Ciclovía shows that urban change is not a luxury, but a deliberate choice. Bogotá didn't wait for a budget surplus; it used a Sunday morning and a few thousand traffic cones to rewrite the rules of the road.
Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/citylab, https://www.cnn.com, https://www.normanfosterfoundation.org
Tags: Paris / Anne Hidalgo / Norman Foster / Public Space / Car-Free / Urban Transformation / bcdW Current Today : May 4, 2026


