I’ll continue the Palmerston North theme of late, by mentioning one of the successful outcomes from the 2018 2WALKandCYCLE Conference there – a couple of big award wins for Christchurch-based projects, as first reported back in Aug 2018. The Uni-Cycle continues to be a much-used connection from town out to Canterbury University. And Biketober has become an annual fixture in the local calendar every October. However, we may be reviewing exactly what form the 2024 event takes – watch this space…
As foreshadowed a couple of weeks back, Christchurch featured a number of nominations in this year’s Bike to the Future Awards, organised by the NZ Transport Agency and Cycling Action Network. At last Tuesday’s 2WALKandCYCLE Conference dinner the winners were announced, and Christchurch was the big winner…
Christchurch City Council scooped the Supreme Award of the night for the Uni-Cycle Major Cycle Route, after the new cycleway had earlier picked up the “Built Excellence” award category. The judges said the Uni-Cycle is “an exemplar project” requiring extensive stakeholder engagement throughout the construction process to accommodate the needs of a university and two large high schools, whilst also maintaining the residential character of the areas the route passes through. It features a mixture of separated cycleways, shared paths, neighbourhood greenway, various signalised crossings and an automatic gated rail crossing. Since opening, the cycleway has seen a 50% increase in usage, well above initial projections.
Also successful on the night was the Biketober Christchurch 2017 festival, which took out the “Revolutionary” award category for the best event. The month-long celebration of cycling last October featured over 60 different events aimed at getting people out on their bikes around Christchurch. This was very much a team effort including Spokes Canterbury, ViaStrada, Chch City Council and a whole host of volunteers from around the local cycling scene. As programme coordinator, I was very honoured (but also very surprised!) to be stepping up to receive the award trophy on the night.
Talking to the judges afterwards, key to winning both categories was the clear numerical evidence of success. Being able to report on the great numbers taking part in the various Biketober events and the impressive growth in Uni-Cycle numbers clinched it; they also serve as a good model for other places to emulate.
{With my ViaStrada hat on, it was also great to acknowledge the success of the Palmerston North Junior Road Safety Park (Highly Commended) and the Hastings MoveIt! School Travel Plans (Finalist), both of which we were involved in.}
It’s been a long time since Christchurch was widely acknowledged in these awards; while other places have picked up various gongs for some (sometimes one-off) flashy efforts, our city has been quietly going about its business building a cycle-friendly city. I look forward to seeing more local projects and other initiatives that might get honoured in the future…
What in Chch could be nominated for the next Bike to the Future Awards?