1. Found on: Sex and the Velocar

    [[image:velo_mini.jpg::inline:1]]If all goes well, we should start to see a number of velocars jockeying for parking spaces at Trader Joes, shooting down PCH on high-speed joyrides, and pulling into double-car suburban garages nationwide. •••

    Category: Feature Articles
  2. Found on: Narrowed roads gain acceptance in Colo., elsewhere

    When Colorado Springs decided to make streets friendly to users other than cars, county officials howled. •••

    Category: News
  3. Found on: Bicycle shame

    You don't have to go farther than Hollywood to see one reason Bicycle Neglect is so rampant in North America. …

    Category: News
  4. Found on: Changes for bikes will be stationary in S.F.

    San Francisco transportation planners are reviewing eight of The City’s major bicycling trouble zones, areas that advocacy groups have been clamoring to fix for years. •••

    Category: News
  5. Found on: Setting a Course For a Healthier Way of Living

    With $517,000 Grant, Campaign Aims To Encourage Bike-Riding to School •••

    Category: News
  6. Found on: Want to help the environment? Get on yer bike!

    We should stop abusing the travellers on two wheels – they are a far lesser menace than drivers, writes Catherine Deveny. •••

    Category: News
  7. Found on: Paris, the city of bikes?

    he Tour de France hasn't arrived yet, but the bicycles have. Paris is awash in two-wheelers, thousands of taupe bicycles that are part of a plan by City Hall to get people out of their cars and onto more eco-friendly transportation. •••

    Category: News
  8. Found on: Off-road on one wheel

    In mountain unicycling, there are no gears, shocks and often no brakes. No matter. For enthusiasts, two wheels is overkill. Tip: Stay away from cactus. In mountain unicycling, there are no gears •••

    Category: News
  9. Found on: Stuff to Do On Wednesday Evening (7-25-07)

    [[image:complete_streetsters_mini.jpg::inline:1]] Hey all you Complete-the-Streetsters. Two interesting panel discussions that are sure to pique your interest, are taking place tomorrow evening. •••

    Category: Feature Articles
  10. Found on: No cars on Wilshire

    An above-ground rail line to the ocean, along with bike lanes and a few buses, would ease L.A. traffic immeasurably. •••

    Category: News
  11. Found on: Bike tribes

    People have not only discovered that bikes can help them navigate the metropolis, they can also be used as a statement to express who they are and what they're into. •••

    Category: News
  12. Found on: Tips on Improving Motorist and Bicyclist Relations en Espa

    [[image:consejos.jpg::inline:1]] We’ve just translated our Motorist Tips card into Spanish. •••

    Category: Feature Articles
  13. Found on: Ceremonial signing on bike bill next week

    Maine bicyclists are pleased with a new law that assures them of a share of the road but also imposes new safety responsibilities for the two-wheelers, the leader of an advocates' group said Friday. •••

    Category: News
  14. Found on: Remember, cyclists are human beings, too

    Recently, a red Blazer impatiently whisked by me on Myrtle Avenue, the side-view mirror coming within a couple inches of my arm. I caught up to the driver at the light, where I told him how close he had come to me. He cut me off: "Did I hit you?" •••

    Category: News
  15. Found on: Bicycle messengers are pedaling uphill against the Internet

    Bicycle messengers are not quite an endangered species, but their business is certainly going downhill, yet another victim of the Internet. •••

    Category: News
  16. Found on: Bike power

    Queer co-founder says bicycle co-op could answer transportation woes •••

    Category: News
  17. Found on: Bicycle library builds on city’s current mind-set

    Beginning next spring, the city of Fort Collins and BikeFortCollins.org will launch a bicycle library, where residents and visitors can check out bikes for free up to a week. •••

    Category: News
  18. Found on: Editorial: Complete the streets

    They're the blight of suburbia and many city neighborhoods — multilane streets and boulevards that accommodate only cars. •••

    Category: News
  19. Found on: French revolution: Rentable bikes every 900 feet

    The socialist mayor of Paris, Bertrand Delanoë, has seen the future and it's got two wheels, three speeds, an adjustable seat, indestructible tires, a basket, and a bell. •••

    Category: News
  20. Found on: Pedal pushers

    A lot of New Yorkers bike, and more probably would (especially in hard-to-reach parts of town), if only they didn’t actually have to, you know, own a bicycle. •••

    Category: News
  21. Found on: Dutch Cycling Is High in Low Country

    Whether it's over the stone bridges and through the hectic traffic of Amsterdam, or across the windmill-dotted pastures of the countryside, the Dutch cycle everywhere. •••

    Category: News
  22. Found on: A Representative for the Riders

    It should be no surprise that Oberstar — the powerful chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee — recently inserted a bicycle provision into a hefty bill dealing with major airport and airplane projects. •••

    Category: News
  23. Found on: Pedal power

    Don't want a big moving company to push you and your stuff around town? Then grab a bike — and maybe some new friends ••

    Category: News
  24. Found on: Bicycle use indicates people-friendly town

    In early June, Tennessee passed a law requiring motorists to pass bicycles with at least a 3-foot berth. The law reflects the increased value local governments are placing on bicycle-friendly communities. •••

    Category: News
  25. Found on: Cycling is “best buy” in transport

    The value of investment in active travel reviews evidence from around the world, and concludes that schemes to encourage a shift from private motorised transport to walking and cycling are the most cost efficient use of transport funds. •••

    Category: News