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Creating a ‘culture of cycling’ in Boulder, Co.

Posted: Tuesday, December 16, 2008 11:26 AM

BOULDER, Co. – As real estate agent Matt Kolb recently toured several properties he wore a helmet. It wasn’t a hard-hat fit for a construction site but a bicycle helmet.  Kolb sells homes from the back of a two-wheeler.

"Boulder is in the top-five bicycle-friendly cities in the world," said Kolb. "On a bike, you can get anywhere in town in 20 minutes or less."

Jack Chesnutt / NBC News
Real estate agents Matt Kolb and Scott Sweeney of “Pedal to Properties” ride bikes to check out a property in Boulder, Co.

Real estate firm Pedal to Properties has teamed up with a non-profit called Community Cycles, which supplies low-cost bikes and maintenance to local businesses as a way to encourage emission-free transportation. 

‘Outdoor deficit disorder’
Community Cycles, which was founded by a handful of Boulder bike-riders two years ago, has become a driving force in getting people out of cars and onto bikes. "We started out with a plan to distribute bikes," said Rich Points, Community Cycles’ executive director. "But now we want to address larger issues."

For Points, getting out of the office and onto a bike "combats ‘outdoor deficit disorder.’ You are more involved in the changes in the environment. You are more involved with your own community."  Even with the onset of winter, Points is not willing to give up the bicycling. He just shifts over to studded bike tires on snowy days.

Community Cycles also features a program called "earn-a-bike" – aimed at the homeless or jobless – where participants who attend 15 hours of instruction on bicycle mechanics receive a like-new rebuilt bike. They also refurbish donated bikes and unclaimed bikes from the Boulder Police Department and give them away to children who need them.

But the program that financially sustains Community Cycles is the growing number of partnerships with local businesses to provide mechanical upkeep for their bike fleets.

Even scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, which is based in Boulder, are taking advantage of the two-wheeled transport. Community Cycles supplied the center with a fleet of 20 custom-painted bikes, including many with hurricane-related nicknames like "Rita," "Hugo" or "Andrew."

 "Perfect names for a bunch of atmospheric scientists," chuckled Kimberly Kosmenkos, the center's manager of sustainability programs. 

"The program has grown over the last few years," said Kosmenkos. "And we couldn't do this at all without Community Cycles to keep the fleet running."

Once a week, a mechanic from Community Cycles pedals over to the office, towing a small trailer loaded with tools and a workbench to keep the fleet running. Some of the bikes are checked out for weeks at a time by visiting scientists – others are simply left in the rack so that anyone can jump on for a quick errand or trip to lunch.

Jack Chesnutt / NBC News
Community Cycles bike technician Peter Allen works on the fleet of bikes at the Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Co.

‘Creating a culture of cycling’
For Points, Community Cycles’ executive director, riding a bike is about more than saving on gas costs. "When I ride, I nod and wave to other bikers. That's not something you do from inside a car," he said. "Our old motto was, ‘Your bicycling community at work,’ but now it's, ‘Creating a culture of cycling.’ And we mean that. We no longer just distribute bikes, we want to change a culture."

 Kosmenkos agreed. "If the bikes were not available, people wouldn't get away from their cars so much," she said. "People who have office jobs can spend 90 percent of their time indoors. The free bikes encourage exercise and improve health."

Even though gasoline has slipped from over $3 a gallon to below $1.80 in most parts of the country, the use of bikes for basic transportation is growing.

In October, Congress passed the Bicycle Commuters Act as part of the bailout plan. Beginning in January, it will give companies a tax credit of up to $20 each month per cycling employee – a few greenbacks to encourage a greener way to get around town.

For real estate agent Kolb, the tax rebate is less important than what their participation says about his firm.

"People hear about us in connection with cycling and think, ‘Hey, these guys think outside the box.’ And they like the way we bring them into the community. It has definitely closed some sales for us."

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Comments

Kudo's to Boulder.  We should do more of this in other cities and towns!
Thats all well and fine, but what about the people that still have to drive??
Those people in Boulder think they own the roads, they ride all over the place in total disregard to basic traffic laws!!
This is pretty cool.  But you should check out the Bike Library and the Bike Co-op in Fort Collins, Boulder's little neighbor only 50 miles down the road.
www.FCBikeCoop.org; www.FCBikeLibrary.org.

This figures in with the rest of the odd clods of Boulder....20 sq. miles surrounded by reality.
God I love Boulder,what ever happened to the red zinger bike race
This is great. Makes me want to move there, actually.
Wow Ferris...improving the environment, being healthy, and actually interacting with other humans...and that makes them 'Odd Clods' to you...hmmm, how telling for you.  Unfortunately your "reality" is the sadder one.

If I did not live 45 miles north of Houston, I would love to bike to work everyday...guess I am odd too.  <eye roll>
Boulder is awful for bikes, I lived there 3 years, people drive incredibly fast and you are in constant danger, bikes and pedestrians get smashed by cars daily there. No thanks.
This would be all fine and good, but what do you do once you get to work all sweaty from the ride?  I have to go to work in a shirt and tie each day and wouldn't know how to get the right clothes there (can't cram them in a backpack) and don't have access to a shower/locker room once at work.
As a former resident of Boulder County I take issue with w. ferris. All of Boulder County is odd.
Yesterday, December 15,2008, the temperature in Boulder was -15 degrees. I know because I live here, in Boulder, and it was to friggen cold to even go outside, let alone ride a bike.
Reality is what you make.  For many years in this country we have built our culture around the car.  The oil companies, car manufacturers and highway construction companies have made sure of this.  Let's break the paradigm.  Let's build a new reality around the bike and make a society for humans and not machines.  Way to go, Boulder!
hey Brent...in fact they do own the roads, just as much as you do.  they pay taxes for them just like you do.  There are state laws that allow them to use the roads.  No, not every cyclist obeys stop signs and lights...but then again, not every motorist does either, now do they?
Thats all well and fine, but what about the people that still have to drive??
Those people in Boulder think they own the roads, they ride all over the place in total disregard to basic traffic laws!!



Maybe it is you who thinks they own the road!
Try getting around here on a bike in one of America's worst cycling cities, Atlanta, GA. Then scrap your teeth from the front bumper......
Great idea...until you have to go to Boulder. Beautiful city, horrible people.  Anyone who has been stuck behind a pack of militant cyclists taking up the entire traffic lane under the guise of "sharing" the road knows what I am talking about.  They won't even get out of the way of emergency vehicles, which actually resulted in a death a couple years ago when responders could not get to a call in time to save the person's life.
Cars are totally the problem.  Why would you go ANYWHERE that you can't walk to or ride your bike to?  That's an indication that your destination is clearly too far.  Maybe everyone bought into the concept that we can drive everywhere, we can just drive to work, etc...

That thinking hurts everyone and everything.  Boulder has it right.  People are getting more and more out of shape, and yet still electing to drive to the gym, schools, work, the supermarket and so on.

They should make driving far more expensive, raise gasoline prices to about $12 per gallon, impose a yearly ownership tax on new cars of 5% except for mass-transit, delivery and emergency vehicles.

If you can't walk to it, then it's too far, so MOVE or order it delivered.
To the guy who can't figure out how to bike to work....  On Monday you drive taking with you 4 dress shirts and matching ties.  You bike on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday taking home dirty shirts with you on the bike.  Yes, most offices have bathrooms where you can wash your underarms, apply antiperspirant, and just add the tie & shirt.  Nothing like a whiner!
It would be great to see more cities and towns move toward bike friendliness, the problem is integrating the bike lanes into an already existing infrastructure based on and favoring the automobile. It can be done, but unfortunately nobody wants to pay for it.
Bicycles in Boulder are a pain in the a*$! While I'm puttering on my way to work or the store all of a sudden packs of gaudily clad 'bubbleheads' clog up the roads or speed recklessly down the canyons. I don't know what it is but everytime you see one of these idiots they're acting like Lance Armstrong hopped up on illegal drugs thinking the roads of Boulder County are the Tour de France. It's time to put license plates on these a$$%^&*$!
Chris W in Fairfax,  I had the same problem when I wanted to start riding in to work every day last spring.  I found that if I drove one day a week and brought my clothes to work for the week, I could ride without having to cart the clothes back and forth.

As for showering, if you shower before you leave home and then use a wash cloth with soap in a sink and some alcohol wipes in a bathroom stall, you can clean up pretty well.  

Just figure out what your obstacles are and try to think of ways to overcome them.  Happy Riding!!
Jeffrey in Denver wrote:

"hey Brent...in fact they do own the roads, just as much as you do.  they pay taxes for them just like you do."

Wrong...Colorado roads are supported almost entirely by the .22 state gasoline tax, along with some federal funding which originates from the federal gasoline tax.   Drivers of gasoline (and diesel) -burning vehicles pay for the roads, and people who buy no fuel do not.
Portland, OR is way ahead of the curve on bike commuting with nearly 10% of daily commuters using bikes.  I began bike commuting from a suburb 15 miles from downtown and featuring a 750 foot climb in both directions two years ago.  This has resulted in 25 pounds of weight loss, better health, and loads of monetary savings.  When gas goes back to $4 / gallon (and it will!) this will cause me no stress whatsoever.  The most wonderful part of the switch is that my bike commute takes 5-10 minutes less than my old car commute.  Lord knows I don't miss sitting in freeway gridlock when I "shortcut" through wonderful old neighborhoods and forested parks on two wheels.
Any time a story like this is published, there are predictable, negative reactions. Why? Those people who are responding with complaints regarding "disregarding traffic laws" "They think they own the road" are scared that a way of life that they can not imagine stopping, is ending. Intrenched  and ossified thinking from the car cult will not stop those that see in bicycles a new freedom from automobiles. These cars have become a noose around American's necks, slowly killing man's environment and making him too fat to get out of the way.  
It's about "creating a culture"..this takes time and a willingness to do things differently. It means we take steps to begin the process of creating a culture that values things like; excercise, a clean environment, making human connections with those who live, work or play in your community. It's a total reversal of how our nation has operated for years but the more people begin to participate, validate that it's a good idea the less there will be "accidents",  businesses will begin providing adequate accomodations, cities will install bike racks and bike lanes.  Think slow and steady as opposed to our "fast food", we want it yesterday mentality.  GO BOULDER GO!!!
I live and work in Boulder and the town is definitely bicycle friendly.  Kudos to those who can participate.  Unfortunately, Brent is right.  Driving here can be very dangerous as many (NOT ALL) bicyclists do not obey traffic laws.  It's frustrating to drivers who pay high taxes for our license plates to operate on the road when cylists, who don't pay those taxes, ride without regard for their safety or that of motorists.  I hope the cyclists in Boulder continue to be a growing crowd.  I also hope the cyclists gain the necessary education and, when operating on the roads, obey the rules of the road in force to protect drivers and cyclists alike.  Judge if you feel qualified but it's an issue here.
S Hirshfield, yesterday it was -17 at my house in Denver.  There was snow on the trails and it was a a nice ride to work.  You just have to learn how to dress in layers
Bike Riding....sheer genius

Renewable and Green Emphasis...outstanding

Hairy Arm-Pit Chicks....Not so much
People will figure out how to bike for transportation when they decide to just do it.  Those of us who've been doing it for years aren't superhuman; we just decided to do it and figured out how to solve the minor problems associated with it (weather, sweat, parking, whatever).
When did you last see a bike rider in Boulder come to a full stop at a stop sign, , especially on access streets along major roads like 28th street? It's just a matter of time until one gets killed going through an intersection without stopping.      
All and good for Boulder Colorado but if you try that bike stuff around here if the cars don't get you the armed robbers will!!!
I want to ride to work beginning after the first of the year. Question,is it ok to wear bike shorts and tights under my work dress cloths? I do not have a dressing room at work. Thanks Tom
My daughter lived in Boulder for a while.  It was great.  I MISS FOOLISH CRAIGS AT THE PEARL STREET MALL.
 A great community.  Some of the yuppies are still a bit snotty, but overall, boulder is a great city.
Be prepared to either Drive a Subaru Outback, or an Audi LOL
 
People in general just need to look out for the other people in the street. My friend, an avid cyclist, just got hit walking legally in a crosswalk by a city bus. Too bad she didn't have her helmut on while walking. Broke her skull in two places.
I have been biking to work for the past 3 years in Northeastern Pennsylvania.  I manage to ride at least four days a week most of the time.  It takes a lot more planning but the payoff is a great workout and a huge savings in auto expense.  Mostly the drivers around here are pretty nice they get to know you.  There are always a few rude drivers but you will have that.  People don't know what they are missing!
Hi, I am a former citizen in Boulder, I use to live in Boulder since 1986 until 1989 at CU CAMPUS because of my study programme. Some people that were doing the same tell me the city has changed a lot and the environment neglected. I congratulate Boulder citizens for doing an effort to care. As I remember, it is one of the most beautiful places in the USA. My appiest years I lived, unforgetable ones.
I'm an avid mtn biker and ride to and from work which is only 3 miles. But bikes really do not belong out on main roads with traffic since they end up being at least as much a nuisance as the old lady puttering along clogging up traffic. I am able to use neighborhood roads and only cross a few main streets, and yea, if nobody is coming I don't sit and wait at stoplights. This makes people mad who are sitting   at stoplights, but really I am just staying out of their way and they are just mad because I am gone while they are still sitting and waiting for the light to change, not because I am in their way. Sour grapes, poor baby, sour grapes.
full stops at a stop sign... FU! stop signs are yield signs for bikers and red lights are like stop signs; these signs were never designed for cyclists; as you fat lazy slobs who don't ride bicycles may or may not know, a 200-250 pound object moving at 10 MPH is not the same as a ton and a half moving at 30 MPH.... confucious say: he who drives car 3 miles to get 1 gallon of milk == lazy m'fer!

gerald clough
phoenix, AZ
http://www.savagerun.com
i love biking! last year I lived in Amsterdam doing volunteer ministry and we were given bikes. it was a bit intimidating at first, especially when most dutchies can bike before they can walk and the 2 most important rules they tell you are never stop and dont die.
 being a midwesterner, biking is difficult because everything is spread out. if i was in a bigger city i would definitely bike, and the more bikers the more the city evolves to accommodate not only the bikers but the pedestrians and motorists as well. even though bikes have the right of way most of the the time in amsterdam, they still use bells and locals know where to walk. amsterdam may look scary at first but once you get into it, you find its a pretty well oiled system. unless youre a tourist, good grief. for the love people, if you visit amsterdam and hear a bell, get the heck out of the way or you will get run over! embrace the bike america!!!
Been very fortunate for the cooling weather here in Arizona. I have been cycling to work & back since 02OCT'08...12 miles each way & have used a dust mask to minimize breathing in pollutants. Go Biking !!!!
Yes every City needs to start Bycle Communities instead of driving to get milk & bread & laundry soap why not put baskets & give moms free child seat & cart for their small trips???
I'm all for biking and being green, but the 'boulder bubble' is something else.  In the 6 months I lived there I pegged two bikers and one of them I had to get out of my car and yell at for him being an idiot riding his bike in a snowstorm.  So far me and my caddy 2, bikers 0.
Big props to Boulder and the proponents of more bikes, less cars.  I'm a firm believer in "where there's a will, there's a way."  It's all about priorities.  However, as a resident of the San Francisco Bay Area in California where in most surrounding cities the traffic is terrible even on side streets, I can tell you two things:  Any intelligent person should add the risk of location into the factors that influence their biking decisions - the risk being the bike safety of the roads you travel (i.e. car traffic, lack of bike lanes, etc.)  For example, if I'm trying to decide if I should bike from point A to point B and 8 out of 10 people who bike that same route to work have been hit by a car, I think I'll opt not to take that route.  If someone decides to ignore this high safety risk, then I guess they deserve being eliminated by natural selection because they didn't use common sense.  Secondly, the other issue nobody is raising here relates to the work commute from home and the impact of the economy on this.  For example, Johnny goes to college and gets a degree that lands him an engineering job in the Bay Area.  Johnny is doing well and buys a home in San Jose near his work.  2 yrs later, Johnny is laid off work and to avoid home foreclosure, he must take a job that he qualifies for that is a 1 hr drive from his home in San Jose. The only bike route to work is the frontage road along the freeway where people drive 60mph, so Johnny opts to drive part way and take BART for the remainder.  My point is, for those of us who live in a Metro area, biking 100% of the way is just not always an option.  "Change jobs then!" you may say - well that means selling your house, which today is not even an easy task!  The point is, biking all the time is a great idea, but it's tough to make it work everywhere for everyone.  Big Props to those who can!  
I commute 20 miles to/from Boulder everyday as long as the roads are clear without snow/ice.  Some cyclists do run over red lights at some T intersections.  I also run thru stop signs occassionally when there's absolutely no other car/people in sight.  In general, I have found my relationship with car driver and mutually respective one (probably with me respecting them more. :)  

And yes, I do own other cars and pay taxes for those.  I consider not driving them provide more road space for people who prefer to drive.  This is all fine to everyone.
OK its a really good idea to ride a bike everywhere possible and for a community to provide bike lanes and trails and lots of bike support, rentals, programs etc. But like many good ideas, it can be converted into a snobbish, arrogant, exclusive, judgemental and (as some have mentioned) "militant" lifestyle by the individuals who engage in it. I lived a strict politically and environmentally "correct" alternative lifestyle for many many years and the self-righteousness and idealist-to-the-point-of-ridiculous attitudes drove me back to the middle of the road (hello Boulder). I think every community should support alternative transportation but with humility and respect for individual freedoms and needs. Who wants to be judged if for instance there might be a little Poly in your Cotton. Maybe that was all the thriftstore had that day. And if your sick mom lives across town or across the county or the weaether is awful or you are 80 (no offense to 80 year old bikers)then by all means drive your freakin car.
Little known fact: Paved streets predate automobiles; they owe their existence to bicycles.  The bicycling craze of the late 1800’s created demand for a road surface that would not turn to mud when it rained.  The League of American Wheelmen lobbied the powers that be and the tax-paying cycling public got what it wanted.  And, uh, Tom Smith--ya got a bathroom in the office?  I'm sure you can make it work. . .
It's easy to turn this into a crazy cyclists vs. crazy drivers debate, but nothing is ever that simple. In fact, it's the crazies on both sides that steer me away from city cycling.

I live in Chicago, my commute is a mere 4 miles, and I'm an eco-conscious consumer who uses mass transit and does not own a car. However, biking in this city scares the bejesus out of me. For every conscientious cyclist or driver out there, there's also a jerk who endangers everyone around them. My busy route doesn't even have a bike lane; at every bridge or overpass, I hold my breath for anyone squeezing in their bike among the speeding vehicles. This city will have to become a lot more bike-friendly before I become any less hood-ornament-terrified.

All that aside, as a woman with long and unruly hair, splashing some water on myself in the bathroom doesn't cut it. If you're able to look fresh-faced and decent after a vigorous bike ride, then more power to you, but I tend to look like the bride of Frankenstein. My clients would go running for the hills.
I love Boulder. I used to live in Allenspark on Hwy 7 and would go to Boulder all the time. Each summer in the late 60s we would see the McDonald's sign on the main street change the "million sold". Too bad McD caved to the homosexual lobby - we go to BK now (anywhere but McD).  
this is evolution.  Boulder in 1975 was, and yes, was is the operative word, extremely bike friendly.  After work I'd tool up one canyon, walk, with my bike on my shoulder, through Sunshine saddle and then fly down to Tom's Tavern, where, after a hearty dinner of all the basic food groups, slither home to my little place on Kalmia.  Ahh, Tom's is gone, but the memories remain.  For all you stuffed shirts, get a life, change your life and get over being jealous.  Live it.
Cities should be constructed for first walking, second bikes and public transportation, and a distant last cars.  Of course since most of the US is already one long strip mall, it will be hard to change the urban design to favor humans over machines.  That is why I left, I saw no hope in things really changing, except in very limited areas, such as Portland or New York.  Have fun eating at the Olive Garden and driving around until you find the closest parking space to the entrance of Wal-Mart. I haven't driven a car in five years.


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