Get pumped: The 2014 Bike Commute Challenge kicks off next week
September is your best chance to get your co-workers to give biking a shot.
🚨 Please note: BikePortland is currently on hiatus and is not publishing new content. Learn more here and stay tuned for updates. Thank you. - Jonathan 🙏
September is your best chance to get your co-workers to give biking a shot.
You never know what you’ll see at Sunday Parkways Southeast.(Photo J. Maus/BikePortland) Welcome to your menu of weekend rides and events, lovingly brought to you by our friends at Hopworks Urban Brewery. Summer might be waning, but that doesn’t mean it’s time to stop riding bikes! Whether you miss Pedalpalooza or you want to test … Read more
Cleveland’s concept for its abandoned streetcar routes, and other great bike links of the week.
In case you weren’t sure whether Portland is truly unusual as mid-sized U.S. cities go, the comprehensive plan map released this week ought to make it clear.
China’s biggest search engine company has an answer to Google’s self-driving car. And more great bike links of the week.
If you’re looking for some fun on a bike this weekend, look no further than our Weekend Event Guide.
Thanks to a growing number of bike-friendly transit options, it’s never been easier to explore Oregon (and beyond) without a car.
Dress up for Tweed, head to the Gorge for an epic ride, or grab the family for some local community goodness — all that and more are on this week’s menu!
A retired doctor’s tips for stopping long bike rides from screwing up your body, and other great bike links of the week.
Your weekend could look like this.(Photo by J. Maus/BikePortland) I could not be happier that the weekend is coming. Not only because the forecast calls for warmer temps and lots of sunshine, but because I’ve been sick all week battling a head cold that I just can’t shake. Enough about me… What are your big … Read more
Would you support a law that let police check whether drivers in crashes were using their phones at the moment of impact?
Multnomah County alone has created more new professional and technical service jobs in the last three years than the Columbia River Crossing was projected to create throughout the region by 2030.