New York City – More Than 200,000 a Day Are Now Cycling

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    New York City – Build it and they will ride. That’s the message conveyed in the latest annual estimate of the number of bicyclists in New York City by Transportation Alternatives, which found roughly 236,000 New Yorkers riding each day in 2009, up 28 percent from 185,000 daily riders the year before.

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    “More and better designed bike lanes, that’s clearly what’s fueling this growth,” said Wiley Norvell, a spokesman for the bicycling and pedestrian advocacy group, which has conducted an annual cycling estimate for nearly two decades.

    The estimate was extrapolated from cyclist counts performed by the city Department of Transportation at various downtown entry points — including East River bridge crossings, the Hudson Greenway and the Staten Island Ferry.

    Total miles traveled by bike in the city also rose by about the same amount, to 1.8 million miles from 1.4 million miles, according to the estimate, with the vast majority of those miles traveled by commuters or recreational cyclists.

    While the count also includes commercial riders such as bike messengers and food-delivery cyclists, Transportation Alternatives calculates that such riders travel only about 5 percent of the total miles, with non-commercial riders making up 95 percent of bike traffic on city streets.

    “At this point, this is a legitimate and measurable part of the transportation picture,” said Mr. Norvell, “and with transit cuts and traffic congestion, bicycling is the only part of the transportation picture that has a positive outlook.”

    Indeed, the Department of Transportation is looking to double-down on the hundreds of miles of existing bicycle infrastructure, installing more permanent, separated bicycle lanes on major thoroughfares over the next year.

    With more than 200,000 cyclists now rolling around, New York has more daily riders than any other city in the country, Mr. Norvell said, though he admits that this has been the case for several years, owing to New York’s greater size. “Chicago, which is a great cycling town, would need 10 percent of its commuters on bikes to reach these numbers,” he said. “But the rapid growth in New York has moved us out into the front of the pack.”

    Charles Komanoff, a policy analyst and a former president of Transportation Alternatives, performed the cycling estimate, as he has since 1992.

    Beginning with data collected by the transportation department — so-called screenline counts [pdf] — at entrances to downtown Manhattan below 50th Street, Mr. Komanoff extrapolates citywide cycling rates based on factors like the bike-to-motor-vehicle ratio at the count points and motor-vehicle traffic citywide.

    “The screenline number is as good a number as I think we have,” he said, “even if it probably overstates the increase in overall cycling,” because it focuses on East River crossings and the Hudson River Greenway, both popular cycling routes that have seen sharp increases in riders.

    But, he added, the trend is clear.

    “I think it’s kind of amazing,” Mr. Komanoff said, comparing the number of riders now to the 1980s. “I think it is now legitimate to refer to cycling as a mainstream mode of travel. And to me, that is a profound development.”

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    12 Comments
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    C.H. er
    C.H. er
    15 years ago

    I ditched my car, and I now ride my bike 5 miles to and from work every day. I can tell you, that I have never felt better or more healthy in all my life! Strongly recommended.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    probably BS numbers, as you know every study outcome depends on who paid for the study, just looking for excuses to take away a few more driving lanes and create impossible driving condisions all in name of global warming which everyone knows is the biggest hoax ever! Bloomy please run for a 4th term we beg you, so he can come up with a way that we have pay for the air we breathe

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    This is one of the easiest ways for members of the heimeshe community to get exercise, contribute to a cleaner environment and save money for themselves too. In willy and bp, just about everything we need to go to is within a short bike ride. We can bike to the market, to shul, to mikvah and to visit friends. There may be times where a car would be helpful but 2/3 of our trips should be by bike. Also, the old rumors about some rabbonim say biking is assur have been shown to be urban legends and not true so its time to get out and bike.

    another CHer
    another CHer
    15 years ago

    I also now ride the bike to work in lower Manhattan. 3 years ago it seemed too risky to do it in Brooklyn traffic, but now there are bike lanes [almost] all the way. Travel time is about the same as on the subway plus walking to and from stations.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    I’m waiting for the weather to lighten up a bit. Next week, B’ezras Hashem, I’ll ride the 9.6 from LES to Boro Park. Go BIKE!.

    concerned
    concerned
    15 years ago

    ride a bike, save on gas and fight oil state (being PC here as it is Isla…)terror. NYC keep on rolling.

    A Boro Park yid
    A Boro Park yid
    15 years ago

    I ride to work 11 mile round trip by bike for the last year, and I’ve never felt better.

    Knock some sense into Williamsburg Hasidim’s heads. If you can’t fight the lanes use them. Its fun, healthy and economical.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    This is another Bloomberg paid POLL

    Shmutzy Moiach
    Shmutzy Moiach
    15 years ago

    Can you liberals with shmutz fer moiach take my 5 small children on your bike? I would love to bike and get the exercise, especially in a February snowstorm or in the freezing rain!