Press Release Source:
Bicycling
Portland, Oregon Once Again Tops Bicycling's
Rankings of America's Best Cycling Cities
Thursday January 26, 12:30 pm ET
Portland Maintains Top Overall Spot from
Previous Bicycling Rankings
San Diego, Madison (WI) and Boulder (CO) Are
Best among Cities of Their Size, While Atlanta, Boston and Houston
Are Worst
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 26,
2006--Portland, Oregon is still America's best cycling city,
Bicycling magazine has determined.
Portland, which was previously named America's
top cycling city by Bicycling in its most recent rankings in 2001,
remained the top overall choice again in 2006, as well as the
magazine's choice for top cycling city among those with a
population of fewer than 1 million people. Bicycling's complete
list of America's top cycling cities is featured in the March 2005
issue of the magazine, on newsstands February 1.
The March 2006 issue of Bicycling magazine, on
newsstands February 1, ranks America's top 21 cities for cycling.
(Photo: Business Wire).
San Diego, CA was selected as the top cycling
city in the country for cities with a population greater than 1
million, while Madison, WI (population 200,000 to 500,000),
Boulder, CO (population 75,000 to 200,000) and Davis, CA (Best
Small Town) were also named the nation's top cycling markets among
their respective population sizes.
The worst cities for cycling, according to
Bicycling's findings, are Atlanta, GA; Houston, TX and Boston,
MA--which, ironically, is the city in which Bicycling
VP/Editor-In-Chief Steve Madden grew up and learned how to
ride.
Bicycling, the world's leading bike magazine,
ranked the top five cities in each of four population
groupings--cities with more than 1 million residents; cities with
500,000 to 1 million residents; cities of 200,000 to 500,000
residents; and cities with 75,000 to 200,000 residents--along with
the best cycling "small town" (fewer than 75,000 residents) in the
country. The winners are:
-- Best U.S. Cycling City
(overall):
Portland, OR
-- Best Cycling City
(population 1 million or more):
1. San
Diego, CA;
2.
Chicago, IL
3. New
York, NY
Honorable mention: Philadelphia, PA; Phoenix, AZ
-- Best Cycling City
(population 500,000 to 1 million):
1.
Portland, OR
2.
Denver, CO
3.
Seattle, WA
Honorable mention: San Francisco, CA; Austin, TX
-- Best Cycling City (population
200,000 to 500,000):
1. Madison,
WI
2. Tucson,
AZ
3.
Albuquerque, NM
Honorable
mention: Minneapolis, MN; Anchorage, AK
-- Best Cycling City
(population 75,000 to 200,000)
1. Boulder,
CO
2. Eugene,
OR
3. Ann
Arbor, MI
Honorable
mention: Chattanooga, TN; Cambridge, MA
-- Best Small Town for
Cycling: Davis, CA (population 60,308)
To determine its list of the
top 21 U.S. cycling cities, Bicycling
started with a list of more
than 250 cities and determined the
winners and finalists using
criteria that weighed factors such as:
--
"Cycling-friendly" statistics (numbers of bike lanes and
routes, number of bike racks, city bike projects completed
and
planned)
-- Bike culture (number
of bike commuters, popular clubs, cool
cycling events, renowned bike shops)
-- Climate/geography
(the quality of roads and trails for riding,
and
how frequently mother nature lets riders enjoy them)
Bicycling also surveyed experts at national
bicycle groups such as the League of American Bicyclists, the
Thunderhead Alliance and the International Mountain Biking
Association (IMBA), while also polling more than 600 Bicycling
readers.
"Rankings such as ours often provoke a lot of
debate, which is understandable and, actually, welcome," said
Madden. "Because the riding conditions and levels of cycling
enthusiasm in these cities are so outstanding, they all deserve to
gain some recognition as America's biking treasures.
"But the selection of Portland as the country's
best city for cycling turned out to be maybe the easiest part of
this process for us. It's been the top U.S. city in each of our
previous three rankings (2001, 1999 and 1995), and cycling has only
continued to improve there. The number of cyclists has tripled over
the past ten years, city traffic congestion is down because of it,
and it's the only urban area that's been able to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions over the past four years (which they've done
significantly) while national levels have risen 17%."
Portland and nearby Eugene give Oregon two
entries on the Best Cycling Cities list, a number matched by
Arizona (Phoenix and Tucson) and Colorado (Boulder and Denver).
California had three cities (San Diego, Davis and San Francisco)
represented on the list, the most of any state.
About Bicycling:
As the world's biggest bike magazine, 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.
Contact:
Rodale, Inc.
Chris Brienza, 212-808-1358
Chris.Brienza@Rodale.com
or
Alissa Neil PR
Alissa Neil, 212-431-4411
alissa@alissaneilpr.com
Source: Bicycling