Bicycling Magazine Names the Best Cities for Cycling
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Boston moves off "The Worst" list and on to "5 For the Future";
Portland is "Still the Greatest" and New York and DC are "Most
Improved"
--Top International Cities for Cycling Also Named--
NEW YORK--(Business Wire)--
In its June issue, Bicycling magazine names the best American
cities for cycling. Portland Oregon, Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco
and Boulder snagged the top spots as America's overall best but
especially notable on this year's list is Boston ranking in the "5 for
the Future" category; Boston has been a recurring fixture on
Bicycling's "Worst Cities for Cycling" list for the past three years.
This year's list pays homage to cities that have shown real
innovation and drastic changes. The complete list of the new best
cities for cycling is as follows:
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*T
#1 Most Improved City: Washington, DC
#2 Most Improved City: Louisville, KY
#3 Most Improved City: New York City
Most Improved Cities Minneapolis, MN and San Jose, CA
(Runners-Up):
Still the Greatest: Portland, OR
Seattle, WA
Chicago, IL
San Francisco, CA
Boulder, CO
5 For the Future: Boston, MA
Los Angeles, CA
Salt Lake City, UT
5 For the Future Columbus, OH and Fargo-Moorhead, ND
(Runners-Up):
*T
Central to Boston's noteworthy move is mayor Thomas Menino's
newfound love of cycling. After getting hooked on his new Trek Lime,
Menino hired former Olympic cyclist Nicole Freedman to serve as
Boston's bike coordinator; a position the city had eliminated in 2003.
The pair is working on the first significant cycling-friendly
development since then: 5-foot-wide bike lanes extending along
Commonwealth Avenue.
"Bicycling's Best Cities list this year proves that great things
can happen in short periods of time, even in the largest metropolitan
areas," said Steve Madden, Editor-in-Chief of Bicycling. "Watching a
city like Boston turn its city cycling plans into reality has been an
incredibly gratifying process for us. It's evidence that a much
needed, far reaching pro-cycling movement is in the works."
To compile the list, Bicycling editors started with a list of more
than 250 cities and narrowed it down using the following factors:
cycling-friendly statistics (numbers of bike lanes and routes, bike
racks, city projects completed and planned) including changes in these
statistics and a city's future plans since the last survey; bike
culture (number of bike commuters, cycling clubs, cycling events,
renowned bike shops); and a survey of experts at national bicycle
groups such as the League of American Bicyclists, Bikes Belong, the
Thunderhead Alliance and the International Mountain Biking Association
(IMBA).
As for the worst American cities for cycling, Bicycling pointed to
Dallas, TX; Memphis, Tennessee; and Miami, FL; all of which are devoid
of bike lanes, and ruled by cars.
Internationally, Amsterdam snagged the top spot as the best
foreign city to visit by bike. Additional winners are: Copenhagen,
Denmark; Melbourne, Australia; Montreal, Canada; Bogota, Columbia;
Paris, France; Barcelona, Spain; and Berlin, Germany.
For more information on Bicycling's Best Cities for Cycling, visit
www.bicycling.com or pick up the June issue of Bicycling (on
newsstands May 6).
About Bicycling:
As the world's biggest bicycling magazine, claiming spots on
Adweek's Hot List three years in a row, Rodale Inc.'s Bicycling is the
voice of cycling, providing the stories on the personalities, trends,
and techniques behind the sport. Appealing to readers of every ability
and interest level, the magazine features expert reviews of the latest
equipment as well as training and fitness tips. Published 11 times a
year, Bicycling is the magazine for the athlete for whom the bicycle
is the centerpiece of an active lifestyle.
Bicycling
Alissa Neil, 212-431-4411
Alissa@alissaneilpr.com
or
Jocelyn Nubel, 212-431-4411
Jocelyn@alissaneilpr.com
Copyright Business Wire 2008
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