
For anyone interested in getting around without a car, the new transportation legislation holds nothing but bad news.
Bikes aren't known for their smart storage solutions, but this cycle says it has room for over 300 pounds of your stuff.

The United States has added new routes to its national bike system for the first time in 30 years.

Urban bike sharing programs hope to make road cycling more accessible to casual riders. The challenge is getting them to bike like pros.
Contradictions abound. Is Los Angeles on the verge of becoming one of our great American cities or is it just another sprawling mess?

Portland, Oregon, is working to increase the percentage of trips taken by bike from 7 percent to 25 percent by 2030.

How do you plan on getting to school and work tomorrow? Join Washington, D.C., Mayor Adrian Fenty, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, and Schools...
If you didn't already know it, biking and walking are really good for you. Thanks to a new study released by the Alliance for Biking and Walking...

Today, Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa signs a comprehensive new bike plan for the city. We asked local experts what it means for cyclists.

Re:route will provide users with biking and walking routes and reward them for completing those journeys without a car.

Urban biking may be on the rise but white cyclists dramatically outnumber cyclists of color, and far more men than women hop on bikes each day.

As if cyclists around the world needed even more reason to pine for the streets and bike paths of Copenhagen.
[Updated June 2011] Taking a trip in the city? Chances are good that you aren't going more than two miles, and that you're driving. In fact, 40...
A new documentary focuses on a largely-forgotten writer and urbanist whose ideas were ahead of his time. (Plus a contest.)

What do America's bike paths look like from coast coast and how do bike lanes in cities stack up?

Help us pick the best of three designs for our crowdsourced bike light. Then we'll get to work making it.

Alaska tops a new ranking of biking and walking levels in all 50 states. Among cities, Boston takes the number one spot.

Young people also biked more, walked more, and took more trips on public transit than they did in 2001, according to a new report.