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Bicycles

Bicycling and the Body (Politic)

ABOUT 

  • ABOUT John O'Neal

    John O’Neal is a transportation planner at the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP). As a transportation planner at CMAP, O’Neal works primarily on projects related to non-motorized transportation planning and programming – bicycling, walking, and other forms of active transportation. Through his work, O’Neal hopes to help the region and its communities become more walkable and bikeable, and to develop in ways which are healthy, equitable, and sustainable.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Greg Borzo

    Greg Borzo is a writer and lifelong bicycle enthusiast who enjoys road biking and the practical, utilitarian benefits of commuting and running errands by bike. He has a Masters Degree from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. His next book, Where to Bike Chicago, will be available in January 2011. It is a full color guide to 70 bike trails and paths in the city and suburbs.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Randy Neufeld

    Randy Neufeld is the director of the SRAM Cycling Fund for SRAM Corp, a maker of bicycle components.  The fund supports innovative efforts to promote cycling in Europe and the U.S.  In addition, Randy is strategic management consultant for the National Complete Streets Coalition.  He worked for over twenty years for the Active Transportation Alliance, formally known as the Chicagoland Bicycle Federation. He continues to be active as a board member.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Harry Wray

    J. Harry Wray is a professor of political science at DePaul University. He serves on DePaul’s Sustainability Initiatives Task Force.  He has authored numerous articles and three books, the most recent being Pedal Power: The Quiet Rise of the Bicycle in American Public Life. For the past ten years he has taught a course on Biking and Politics which connects two of his greatest interests. In this class students integrate reading and reflection with regular 30-60 mile rides throughout the Chicago metropolitan area.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Julie Hochstadter

    Julie Hochstadter is co-founder of TheChainlink.org, a local social network for Chicago area cyclists.  The site has grown since its inception in August 2008 to become the" go to" website for local bike enthusiasts who connect through the site via groups, the calendar and the forum. The site has been mentioned in The Chicago Tribune, Crain's Chicago Business and numerous online media outlets and blogs.  To date more than 4,200 members have joined, and the site receives more than 40,000 web hits a month.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is considered by both fans and sportswriters to be the greatest basketball player of all time. The six-time NBA MVP and nineteen-time All-Star dominated the NBA winning six NBA Championships over the span of a twenty-year professional career. He is also the author of seven books, including On the Shoulders of Giants, a New York Times best seller.

    Profile
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Recorded on November 6, 2010.

Fixed gear, single speed, cruiser, recumbent, tandem—regardless of the model, bicycling as transportation, recreation, politics, and culture contributes to urban form, contemporary life, and place-making. In bike-friendly cities across North America—despite their differences in geography, history, politics, weather, and infrastructure—similar organizations, discussions, and planning and design practices for bicycling have emerged. Led by moderator John O’Neal, from the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning, this program will present the history of the culture of urban bicycling. Greg Borzo, author of Where to Bike in ChicagoJulie Hochstadter co-founder of TheChainlink.org, a local social network for Chicago area cyclists, Randy Neufeld of SRAM Corporation and board chair of Active Transportation Alliance, and Harry Wray, author of Pedal Power: The Quiet Rise of the Bicycle in American Public Life will be among the panelists. They will consider bicycling as a political and cultural act and examine how it competes with, complements, and contrasts with other uses of our public spaces and infrastructure investments.

This program is presented in partnership with the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning.

Download this program as a podcast!

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