8. März 2026
•Rick Leerkes•4 Min. LesezeitLook around and you’ll see it immediately: micromobility is growing fast. From cargo bikes and longtails to e-bikes and folding bikes, new forms of micromobility are becoming part of everyday urban life.
This isn’t just a passing trend. It’s a structural shift in how we move through cities. The question is no longer if micromobility has an impact, but how big that impact really is.
The growth of micromobility is no coincidence. Our cities are becoming less car-focused. Municipalities are increasingly choosing less space for cars and more space for cyclists and pedestrians. What does that mean in concrete terms? Less parking spaces. More bike lanes. Stricter environmental zones. New residential areas with lower parking standards.
The car is no longer the automatic starting point of urban development. And that is exactly where space is created for micromobility: light, compact, emission-free and perfect for short, everyday trips.
More different means of transport also means: more different speeds, weights and forms of use. An e-bike rides faster than a normal bicycle, a cargo bike transports children and delivery companies are also focusing on longtails. This brings together different speeds, needs and forms of mobility. You can see this directly reflected in regulations and infrastructure. Municipalities adjust speed zones and reconsider the place of certain vehicles on the roadway. At the same time, bike lanes are being widened, separate parking zones for shared vehicles are being introduced and car parking spaces are disappearing to make room for micromobility.
In Amsterdam, for example, thousands of parking spaces have been removed in a few years to create space for cyclists and pedestrians. That is not a detail, that is a redistribution of scarce urban space.
What is the result? The city is gradually being designed differently. Less focused on stationary cars, more on movement. More people-oriented. And with that, a new dynamic is also emerging on the bike path: busier, faster, more diverse. This requires clear frameworks and smart solutions.
Perhaps the most visible change? The rise of the last mile solution. More and more travelers combine train or bus with a shared bike or folding bike. The bicycle is no longer an alternative to public transport, but an extension of it. In the Netherlands, tens of thousands of shared bikes are spread across hundreds of locations and millions of trips are made annually.
What does that mean? That mobility is no longer a separate choice, but a chain. We switch effortlessly between modes of transport. The city becomes more flexible and more accessible as a result.
The change we are talking about? It is happening now. And you can see it reflected in very concrete choices in Dutch cities.
Amsterdam has been visibly accelerating towards a less car-focused city in recent years. Parking spaces are disappearing from the streets neighborhood by neighborhood to make room for bicycle parking, wider bike lanes and greenery. More and more streets are designed as 30 km/h zones, allowing e-bikes and cargo bikes to flow more safely. In addition, the city works with fixed parking zones for shared bikes and other shared vehicles to guide the growth of micromobility in the right direction. Here you see how regulations, infrastructure and street design come together.
Groningen has been building further on its strong cycling position in recent years with new bike streets, additional parking capacity around Groningen station and improved cycling routes towards surrounding villages. Efforts are also being made to create faster and more comfortable connections for e-bikes, so commuting distances remain attractive without a car. The city center is increasingly designed for pedestrians and cyclists, while car traffic is guided via the ring road.
Houten shows that smaller cities also continue to innovate. The existing, separated cycling infrastructure is further optimized with better lighting, safer intersections and direct connections to new residential areas. Around the station, the focus on high-quality bicycle parking solutions and good public transport connections is growing. In this way, the bicycle remains, even with the rise of e-bikes and longtails, the fastest and most logical choice for daily travel.
Do you want to stay informed about all opportunities and developments in mobility? And do you want to respond to this structural shift with a matching assortment of 23,000 products from more than 160 different brands? Become a customer at PENDLR.
Rick Leerkes
Performance & Marketing
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