>>1327337>How bike friendly is Argentina?buenos aires is total transit chaos, which is awful but at the same tiem, a real opportunity for agile bikes.
there are more and more bikepaths these days, but most of them are retardedly planned and executed (not to mention the huge secret slices builders and politics take from the budget), and there's the usual stupid motorbike or mother with a stroller circulating, so be careful.
but the people is now more confident and you can see many times more bikers now than 5-6 years ago, and drivers are more used to them too.
there are also all the local versions of the usual biking fauna: fixie hipsters, freds, delivery guys, casuals and fanatics, etc.
the city is flat as a billiard table, but mtb's are very common, and really useful since there are LOTS of potholes.
there's a nice public bike system growing in buenos aires, that's not perfect but it works ok.
the rest of the big cities, beeing considerably smaller, are more bikeable, and most of them are pretty flat so commuting is kind of easy.
of course in each city there are red zones that i'd absolutely avoid to cross with an even slightly flashy bike, you may probably be robbed, but this zones are easily identified, anyone can tell you where not to go.
as for the rest of the country, is pretty safe and people is usually kind and eager to help a cyclist. i've biketoured many places and knew a lot of foreign bike travellers that love the country. many intercity roads have no shoulder, though, or they are in awful conditions, so travelling is not always easy.