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Cyclists over 60. Fastest growth of any Demographic

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By Mark Cramer, retiree, cycling advocate, regular contributor to  Freewheeling France   22 percent of the net growth in U.S. bike trips from 1995-2009 is by people ages 60-79. Their biking quadrupled in those 14 years, the fastest growth of any demographic. During the past 17 years I’ve been cycling on a regular basis. As I’ve aged (I’m 72 now), I have observed an increasing population of senior cyclers around me, especially in France, my home base. Recently in Paris I presented a slide show on Cycling in Bolivia. The canyon city of La Paz, Bolivia, where I live for six weeks each year, is 12,000 feet above sea level, has no bike lanes and if you find a rare flat street, it’s never going where you need it to. Given the challenge of cycling in an area with sometimes many thousand foot variations in altitude, I expected a younger crowd to attend the presentation. Instead, the audience was comprised mainly of seniors. Mingling with them I learned that their retirements are e

Bicycle Friendly Hotels

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Responding to the growing demand from guests for bike-related activities and amenities, many hotels are now adopting bike-friendly policies.  Exploring a new city or town by bicycle was once deemed a fringe activity but has become an attractive and sought-after option. Bicycle travel reaches a wider audience of vacationers seeking fun – even family-friendly – adventures. You cannot experience the outdoors all "scrunched up" in a car while watching out for other drivers, looking for your next turn while the guy behind you is anxious to get to the next traffic light. To be considered a Bike Friendly Hotel, a list of possible amenities and nearby attractions is considered. “Amenities include a bike friendly concierge, city bike maps, fix-it or washing stations, bike valet, ability for guests to bring their bike in their room, secure indoor and outdoor parking, proximity to a bike share station, proximity to a cycle track or bike trail, custom picnic baskets, or an

Medical pros tell Government “cut car culture and budget for active travel for kids”

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12 April, 2018 Mark Sutton It's a world-wide pandemic. This report could be processed in any county. This one happens to be from UK. An evidence-based call to action by medical experts to end a “42-year trend” of car domination is gaining traction, with the authors calling on the UK Government to drive a change in transport habits. Published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine , the authors outline the consequences of not getting tough on childhood obesity, something their studies tie to sedentary travel habits. An accompanying letter – mailed to UK transport ministers Chris Grayling, Humza Yousaf, Ken Skates and Karan Bradley – calls for dedicated funding of “at least 10% of the national transport budgets to pay for infrastructure interventions supported by a behaviour change programme.” This is not a new proposal having previously been presented by the Association of Directors of Public Health as long ago as 2008, endorsed by over 100 concerned academic, health, transpor

Every Community Should Promote a CicLAvia Event

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Inspired by Bogotá’s weekly ciclovía, CicLAvia temporarily closes streets to car traffic and opens them to Los Angelenos to use as a public park. Free for all, CicLAvia connects communities to each other across an expansive city, creating a safe place to bike, walk, skate, roll, and dance through Los Angeles. Currently, CicLAvia is a Southern California phenomenon. It has been opening streets across Los Angeles county since 2010. Over 1 million people have experienced CicLAvia. It's the biggest open streets event in the US! Participants represent 80% of the population of the City of Los Angeles. Other Southern California communities are now promoting CicLAvia events in the San Fernando Valley, Culver City, Venice, Mar Vista, Wilshire Blvd., Koreatown, MacArthur Park, South LA, Echo Park, Chinatown, Little Tokyo, Boyle Heights, Historic Downtown, East LA, Pasadena, Pacoima, Arleta, Panorama City, and Southeast Cities. CicLAvia has five times more people using its tempora

Bike use is rising among the young, but it is skyrocketing among the old

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There’s no question that Generation Y’s tendency to favor city life and its declining enthusiasm for car ownership has boosted bike transportation. But as the older Civil Rights Generation and the Baby Boomers who followed them have entered the last third of their lives, they’ve quietly transformed what it means to be the kind of person who rides a bicycle. Between 1995 and 2009, the most recent year for which National Household Travel Survey data is available, the rise in biking among people ages 60-79 accounted for 37 percent of the total nationwide increase in bike trips. Read Entire Article >>

How The Humble Bicycle Can Save Our Cities

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By Eillie Anzilotti Designing a city for bicycles is not just a pleasant idea for the cyclists among us. Designing a city for bikes will also achieve the goals we want for our future urban centers, making them more equitable, healthy, efficient, and clean.  Cities that prioritize bikes over cars effectively reduce carbon emissions, and support public health both by creating clearer air for people to breathe and more opportunities for safe, active transportation.  Bikes also enable many more people to move through the streets at a time than do cars, and when cities are especially concerned with overpopulation and congestion on the roads, bikes emerge as the more efficient option. The bicycle’s ability to address all these concerns makes now, according to Colville-Andersen, an ideal time for cities to re-embrace the bicycle as a primary mode of urban transit. ............................................... Mikael Colville-Andersen rides his bike everywhere in

Yep, Los Angeles has the world's worst traffic congestion — again

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FROM THE INSANITY FILES: U.S. cities dominate the world's top 10 most-traffic-congested urban areas, with Los Angeles leading in mind-numbing and costly gridlock, according to a new report issued Tuesday. La La Land, with its jam-packed freeways and driving culture despite billions being poured into rail transit, emerged from the 1,360 other cities in 38 countries to claim the worst-congestion title for the sixth consecutive year in the 2017 traffic scorecard by INRIX, a leader in transportation analytics and connected car services. Drivers in and around the City of the Angels spent 102 hours battling 2017 traffic congestion during peak hours, INRIX's 11th annual report said. Based on the overall findings, the U.S. ranked as the most traffic-congested developed nation in the world, with American drivers spending an average of 41 hours a year battling traffic during peak travel times of 6 a.m. to 9 a.m., and 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. See USATODAY for complete article