Showing posts with label bike friendly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bike friendly. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2011

Footage from Bike Philly 2009

Eric Sison, who rode Bike Philly in 2009, posted some amazing footage he took
on Vimeo. Watch it one his page http://vimeo.com/6574445 or here, below:

2009 TD Bank Bike Philly from Eric Sison on Vimeo.



As if you needed one more reason to join thousands of other bikers for Bike Philly 2011. (Registration at www.bikephilly.org - and remember the price goes up on 9/1, so register by Wednesday, 8/31.)

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Bike-In Movie: Transforming A Car Space Into A Community Space

We held a Bike-In Movie last night on top of the Whole Foods parking garage on South Street.  Temperatures reached near 100 degrees that afternoon, and the nervous finger-tappers among us worried the heat would dissuade folks from stretching out under the stars and taking in a movie.  Our fears were groundless.
Over 130 men, women, and one dog came out to watch Breaking Away, eat Little Babies Ice Cream and Whole Foods wood-fired pizza, and take in the dusky Philadelphia skyline.  A majority of the attendees came via bike, locking up downstairs on Neighborhood Bike Works-provided racks.

The relaxed, convivial atmosphere was best reflected by the ease with which at least thirty riders left their bicycles unlocked against a nearby wall.  The necessity to lock up one's bike is the most regrettable requirement of bike ownership in Philly, and we were happy to facilitate a temporarily reprieve from that need.  Attendees reclined on blankets, chairs, and flattened cardboard boxes.  With Whole Foods below us, the food consumed was pretty high-end for fare typically scarfed in a parking lot.

Alex Doty spoke about the Bicycle Coalition and bicycling in the city, and introduced three short films (one from WHYY, one from us, and one from Streetsblog), then the feature film.  The greatest spontaneous applause of the night came when Alex mentioned the 10th and 13th Street bike lanes, and when (*SPOILER ALERT*) Dave Stoller passed the college rider on the inside to win the Little 500 race.

Thank you to everyone who came out, and to Whole Foods, Little Babies Ice Cream, and Neighborhood Bike Works for helping with the event.  Together, we repurposed an asphalt car storage space into a bicycle-friendly meeting area infused with a sense of community.  For more images from the night, check out our Flickr page.

Thursday, February 07, 2008

The Time is NOW for a Bicycle Friendly Philadelphia

The Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia released its 2008 Agenda for a Bicycle Friendly Philadelphia today, outlining the policy actions that it is requesting Mayor Nutter take to make Philadelphia the nation's most bike friendly city. Philadelphia could easily become a green city by encouraging more people to get out of their cars and use their bikes for short trips and errands. With its 225 miles of bike lanes and racks on nearly every SEPTA bus, Philadelphia has the beginnings of being a bike-friendly city.

In addition to establishing a bike share program,which the Coalition heartily supports, Mayor Nutter must take a number of important steps to make Philadelphia's streets safer for residents and visitors who want to bike for work, shopping or recreation. The highest priority steps Mayor Nutter should take are to:
  • Establish a Department of Transportation,
  • Create and fill a new position for a full-time Bicycle/PedestrianCoordinator,
  • Develop and implement a new City-wide Bicycle Plan,
  • Close the gaps in the existing bike lane network with particular attention to creating bike friendly streets that connect the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers, and
  • Create more bicycle parking on city streets and garages.

Read the full Bicycle Coalition's 2008 Agenda for a Bicycle Friendly Philadelphia