No, just no
The landscape looked awfully Dutch...and turns out the bikes are Dutch!
1: Raleigh Elegance AKA The Beast. DT swiss mountainbike rim on 3 speed SA hub gear built by local bike shop as it's the child carrying bike and the spokes kept snapping. Now I can kerb jump with the wee man on the back and it won't give. Good for nipping into town to carry things not so much for uphill/fast rides as it's HEAVY around 18KG at least.
2: Charge Hob 2010 42/16 fixie. SPDs. Can be used to longer rides eg day rides, great fun in busy traffic in town as you can slow down the bike and pedal mega slow until the light goes green. Barely need to use the breaks, and slowing down with the legs is great practice for the hamstrings.
3: Thorn XTC 252L 2002 (?) model. SPDs. Bought on e-bay, plenty of scratches but the frame is sound. Immensely comfortable, had to make some adjustments like a shorter stem and different handlebars, and put the saddle forward. Commuting bike along with the Charge, and went on some day rides unfortunately work/wee man mean not a lot of time to get away.
It was loaded a few weeks ago and it seems "pleased" with weight instead of going wobbly like a lot of bikes it "bites" into the ground. One day, front/back panniers and camping in the forest with eating couscous with tuna I hope!
RE riding, when commuting I try to go as hard as I can in a heavy gear as I can. With all the traffic lights to work this is more like "interval training" eg go full out, then breather at the red light and go again. Good for the lungs/sprint muscles.
During day rides it's more 30-35 km/hour steady eg pace it rather than rip it.
Fixed bike is more for technique as the amount of suicidal pedestrians here means you need to be ready for an emergency stop at all times and I don't want a "donkey kick" from the bike. They are really fun here, cars, lorries just cross no matter what