Politics

America's unlikely top city for biking: Minneapolis

The city has edged out Portland, long the leader, by focusing on building bike lanes separated from auto traffic. Such lanes bring more women and older folks into the cycling revolution.

America's unlikely top city for biking: Minneapolis
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Ashli Blow

The city has edged out Portland, long the leader, by focusing on building bike lanes separated from auto traffic. Such lanes bring more women and older folks into the cycling revolution.

People across the country were surprised last year when Bicycling magazine named Minneapolis America’s “#1 Bike City,” beating out  Portland, Oregon, which had claimed the honor for many years.  Shock  that a place in the heartland could outperform cities on the coasts was  matched by widespread disbelief that biking was even possible in a state  famous for its ferocious winters.

But this skepticism fades with a close look at the facts. Close to 4 percent of Minneapolis residents bike to work, according to census  data. That’s an increase of almost 33 percent since 2007, and 500  percent since 1980. At least one-third of those commuters ride at least some days during  the winter, according to federally funded research conducted by Bike  Walk Twin Cities. Even on the coldest days about one-fifth are out on  their bikes.

Minneapolis also launched the first large-scale bikesharing sytem in  U.S. — called Nice Ride — and boasts arguably the nation’s finest  network of off-street bicycle trails.  It was chosen as one of four  pilot projects for the federal Non-Motorized Transportation Program,  which aims to shift a share of commuters out of cars and onto bikes or  foot.

“Biking has become a huge part of what we are,” Mayor RT Rybak  declared to a delegation of transportation leaders from Pittsburgh and  Columbus, Ohio, on a Minneapolis tour sponsored by the Bikes Belong  Foundation. “It’s an economical way to get around town, and many times  it’s the fastest.  I frequently take a bike from city hall across  downtown to meetings.”

This year the city is adding 57 new miles of bikeways to the 127  miles already built. An additional 183 miles are planned over the next  20 years.

In a city where bicyclists of all ages and backgrounds already ride  recreational trails the goal is to encourage people to hop on their  bikes for commuting or short trips.  This is not a far-fetched dream,  since nationally half of all automobile trips are three miles or less — a  distance easily covered on bike in 20 minutes.

To make that happen, Minneapolis is committed to creating separate  rights-of-way for bikes wherever feasible. That factor helps explain why the  city defies trends of bicyclists as overwhelmingly male. While only a  quarter of riders are women nationally, the Census Bureau’s American  Community Survey reports 37 percent in Minneapolis.

Research shows that most people — including many women, families, and  older citizens — are wary of biking alongside motor vehicles on busy  streets.  Having the option to ride apart from heavy traffic encourages  more people to try out biking as a form of transportation.

Since the 1970s Dutch planners have separated bicyclists from motor  vehicles on most arterial streets, with impressive results. Women now  make up 55 percent of two-wheel traffic and citizens over 55 ride in  numbers slightly higher than the national average. The Dutch also found that as the number of riders rises, their safety  increases. Shaun Murphy of the Minneapolis Public Works Department,  notes the same phenomenon — your chances of being in a car/bike crash in  the city are 75 percent less than in 1993.

Mayor Rybak stressed that in these lean economic times, cities across  the country need to be creative about how they spend transportation  dollars.  Big-ticket road engineering projects to move ever more cars  must give way to more efficient projects that move people by a variety  of means — including foot, bike, transit.  “We need to get more use from  all the streets we already have,” Rybak said.

Bike projects in the Twin Cities are not limited to Minneapolis. St.  Paul and many suburbs are also making it easier for people to travel on  two wheels and two feet. Steve Elkins, Transportation Chair of the  Metropolitan Council, a government body that guides development  throughout the region, highlighted his efforts as city council member in  suburban Bloomington (home of the Mall of America) to push the idea of Complete Streets — meaning that roadways should serve walkers and bikers as well as cars.  (There’s a Complete Streets national network and advocacy organization.)

Elkins also extolled the virtue of road diets, conversion of  four-way streets into three-way configurations with alternating center  turn lanes — which create opportunities to add bike lanes or widen  sidewalks without diminishing capacity for cars.  “When done in the  course of regular road repair projects, they cost nothing more than what  it takes for a community outreach campaign,” he noted.

One theme recurring through the entire tour was that better bike  facilities benefit not just bicyclists, but everyone.  Bike lanes  improve safety for motorists too, by slowing the speed of traffic. Mayor Rybak noted, “we’ve found they’re the best traffic  calming device around.”

And at a time when gasoline prices are high and transit service is  being cut across the country, bikes can help fill the transportation  gaps in poor communities and among young people.  The option to commute  and do errands on bike make it easier for many families to get along  with one car, with happy results for the household budget.

Minneapolis was not always a great biking town. I live here, and  would have howled with laughter 25 years ago if you told me Minneapolis  would one day be named America’s best bike city 30 years ago. It was a  frustrating, uncomfortable, and dangerous place to bike.

What changed in Minneapolis was that local bike riders patiently  lobbied for better conditions, slowly winning over elected officials and  city staff.  Also, as the number of bike riders steadily rose,  motorists became accustomed to sharing the streets with us.

Other factors that boosted Minneapolis as a bike town include:

This story comes to Crosscut via Citiwire, a news service about urbanism and regionalism.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal