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Tuesday
Feb282012

My Dream for Bicycle Advocacy 

 

Screenshot from current Benetton Ad shared on Pinterest

My dream is also a challenge for bicycle advocacy here in the U.S. I write this fully willing to volunteer to roll up my sleeves and help make it happen (and it is my hope that our Women On Bikes project here is proof of throwing our hat in the ring). I want bicycle advocacy to harness the power of fashion and style for our cause - for the bike to become an easy viable and safe urban transit choice for anyone interested. And of course I want the power of fashion and style to make almost everyone interested. I'm completely serious about wanting to double the number of women and girls riding bikes here in Southern California over the next five years (want to help make that happen? Click here). Ideally I'd like it to happen in the whole country.

That's what fashion and style can do, and do amazingly well. It can spark our interest. It can create desire where we didn't know one existed. It can make us stand up and take notice of something we've never considered before, or we haven't considered in quite awhile. If we see enough of this new/old item/concept fashion has decided to focus its energy on (say a shade of color, a type of handbag, a cut of pant, a body type, a personality, a car, a type of food, a city, and yes a bike) featured again and again in glossy magazines and blogs, and then have this reinforced in advertisements, something clicks in our brains and we think I really must have pink in my wardrobe this summer! Why haven't I been wearing pink? Think I'm being silly? Consider, if you will, the rise in fashion of cup cake madness in the past decade or so.

Now is the moment. The pump is primed. Fashion responds to what is going on and brings us a new way to think about how our world is shifting and changing - and brings a sense of optimism with which to face these changes.

As gas prices having been rising, as credit has almost disappeared, as technology has opened our world in amazing ways and the planet has become smaller, fashion, design and placemaking have been responding with the rise and celebration of new-urbanism. This is what I'm pondering as I get ready to meet with Mark Plotz, the Director of the Pro Walk/Pro Bike conference later this week. Placemaking is the theme for this year's conference, and placemaking will be very much on our minds as Carolyn Szczepanski of the Alliance for Biking & Walking, Kit Keller of APBP and I host a panel on the topic "Women + Bikes" for the conference (more on that soon, I promise).

The hip young things of today don't want to buy an urban assault vehicle and move to the suburbs. They are finding places like Portland, and Seattle, and New York, and yes, Long Beach, desirable because of their opportunities - one of which is the ability to easily live a car-light or car-free lifestyle. They embrace living within their means, fair trade, and bringing back once lost industries to their choice of living places (more soon on this as well).

But in order for us to double (and really we need to triple and quadruple) the number of women and girls riding bikes in our country to seriously combat the effects of sedentary diseases, expensive gas, traffic congestion, polluted air and more, the bicycle in the urban environment needs to be safe and convenient. In order to entice myriads of women and girls to ride their bikes, moving beyond the hipsters, the early adopters and the trend-setters, getting on a bike needs to become as easy and safe we feel about getting in a car. It means biking in heels needs to be okay if that's what works for you.

In many cities this may mean bike share. In most cities it will mean female-friendly bike infrastructure like separated bike lanes and other amenities that for years the seasoned vehicular cyclists have touted as unnecessary. If riding a bike in urban settings is to become ubiquitous to driving a car little girls and their Moms need to feel welcome and that their needs are being addressed and matter.

The designers have designed the bikes. Bikes comfortable and easy for almost everyone to ride now exist in almost all price points. Bike kitchens where re-built bikes can be bought, or earned, for even less are popping up all over the country. The fashion and style mavens have picked up the bike over the past few years (Fendi, Missoni, Kate Spade, Benneton...the list goes on and on) and have put their own twist on this wonderful transit tool. The bike is moving from a prop in a fashion shoot, to a regularly featured "must have" item in the pages and on the posts of our finest fashion and style outlets, and now they're being featured in ads (as seen in the new Benetton ad above). The iron is hot. The stage is set.

It's time to get our game on. It's time to come together as a team and create a game plan. Here's my dream of a tipping point - five well-known women + five well-known men on the covers of ten fashion and style magazines in May of 2013 on bikes for bike month. Ten people who inspire us with their talent and passion and excellence on the cover of ten magazines. I'm talking about people like Michelle Obama, Oprah Winfrey, Gwen Stefani, George Clooney, Mikeal Colville-Andersen (Mr. Cycle Chic!) and gosh maybe Bruno Mars (didn't he rock the house at the Grammys?).

Are you with me? Can I count you in? I hope you'll join us and be a valuable part of the conversation and the plan!

Reader Comments (3)

Thanks for sharing this. I'm starting to change how I think about bicycles and fashion. I realize that the fashionable trends will help bring about change, and influencing those who may not have initially adopted the bicycle lifestyle become more immersed in it. For that reason, I'm welcoming "cycle chic" rather than criticizing it. In the process of diversifying, I do hope that people from all walks of style work together to help bicycle culture progress by influencing sectors and forces to collaborate in making cities more bicycle friendly, even if it means a few more models on bicycles on a glamorized set.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 6:24PM | Unregistered CommenterMaria @AHealthyDesign / @Chic Circuit

Great post. I shared it on my blog.
The League Certified Bike Instructor program/campaign looks interesting. I'm in San Diego, though. SoCal includes San Diego, but since the program doesn't include it, I'd like if you'd mention that it excludes SD, to avoid confusion.

Sunday, March 4, 2012 at 12:40AM | Unregistered Commentercitymaus

Hi Citymaus:
We didn't exclude San Diego on purpose, there are all kinds of So Cal cities we haven't included - because the League of American Bicyclists currently requests that an LCI program be limited to 12 students - that's it. It's an intense 3 day program, with high student to teacher ratio.

After studying where there were most and the fewest female LCI's in So Cal we realized that Long Beach sat in the middle of a female LCI drought - if you will. The first areas we selected are all a part of that drought area - San Diego, on the other hand, actually has a impressive amount of female LCI's in comparison. If you contact the League of American Bicyclists they can share with you who they are.

We hope to successfully replicate this program in other areas throughout Southern California - but in each case we will focus on those areas that do not already have a robust presence of female LCI trainers. Thank you for your interest!

Sunday, March 4, 2012 at 7:31PM | Registered CommenterMelissa Balmer

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