Today is World Bicycle Day.
The United Nations designated this "holiday" was in 2018. Whether it has contributed to the growth in cycling is debatable. But I won't argue with having such a day.
Interestingly, it's also National Free Donut Day. We have to get our carbs one way or another, right?
Anyway, while one sees bike lanes winding through urban neighborhoods and bike-share programs and bikes, parts and accessories have been in short supply, the attention to such things has focused on the ways they affect young, upwardly mobile people in trendy urban neighborhoods--where, to be fair, the growth in the number of cyclists seems to be greatest.
An article in today's Forbes magazine illustrates, if unintentionally, a possible cause and effect of the phenomena I've mentioned. In it, Jeffrey Steele lists, as his title says, "buildings supporting pedal power." The office and residential towers he mentions feature dedicated bicycle parking rooms, some with security cameras and other amenities. Some of those buildings also include lockers where cyclists can stow their bike-related stuff. The commercial buildings he mentions also have washrooms or even showers and changing rooms and, in one instance, a cafe.
The bike room at 45 Main Street in DUMBO, Brooklyn (Photo from Two Trees Management) |
It all sounds really good. I know this city well enough, however, to see that all of those buildings are places where the residents or workers are the sort of young and affluent (or, at least, upwardly mobile) folks I mentioned at the beginning of this post. Now, I don't have anything against young afflueint people--OK, I get a bit envious of people making more in their first job out of college than I've ever made (I shouldn't have graduated into a recession with a liberal arts degree, right?). My issue is this: Bicycling and cyclists will never get the respect, or at least escape the scorn and hostility, of greater society until, well, all segments of greater society start cycling for transportation and recreation. Also, I think cycling won't become a "people's choice" in the United States or other nations that don't have the cycling culture of some European countries until people who ride to low-wage jobs on handed-down, salvaged or bought-for-cheap bikes are given the same attention and respect as the Instagram images one sees rolling down bike lanes in Williamsburg or other havens of the young, rich and hip.
So, I hope that, if nothing else, World Bicycle Day becomes a way to give all cyclists--rich, poor, male, female, genderqueer and ahem, white, black, brown, yellow, red or whatever color--the respect we deserve for getting to where we want and need to go in a socially and environmentally conscious--and fun!--way.
Oh, and remember that you can "fuel" your ride for free at your nearest Dunkin' Donuts, Krispy Kreme or Tim Horton’s!
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