U.S. bicycling participation benchmarking study report.

Author(s)
Breakaway Research Group
Year
Abstract

Accurate information on bicycling participation is essential in evaluating our overall work and the effectiveness of our programs and key projects. Existing research on bicycling participation has been been limited to either recreational riding or transportation riding of certain types. This new participation research, commissioned by PeopleForBikes and conducted by Breakaway Research Group, is designed to address these limitations by standardizing how participation is bicycling of any kind, by any type of rider, is measured and tracked over time. Topline results: * Thirty-four percent of Americans ages 3+ rode a bicycle at least one day in the past year. * Of those who rode a bicycle, 30% rode five days or fewer. * Those who rode for transportation are much more likely to have done so to get to and from social, recreation, or leisure activities (70%) than to have commuted to and from work or school (46%). * Forty-eight percent of adults in the U.S. don’t have access to an operational bicycle at home. * Fifty-four percent of adults in the U.S. perceive bicycling as a convenient way to get from one place to another and 53% would like to ride more often. However, 52% worry about being hit by a car and 46% say they would be more likely to ride a bicycle if motor vehicles and bicycles were physically separated. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20151325 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Boulder, CO, PeopleForBikes, 2015, 44 p., 66 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.