The key goal of Citi Bike, New York City's new bike share program, is to encourage residents and visitors to try cycling as a means of urban transport.
Biking in the city comes with a lot of benefits: It's healthy, convenient, gets you outside, and reduces carbon emissions in the atmosphere.
This is a great idea until you start thinking about all the folks out there with as much experience biking as flying a space shuttle picking up a bike and tooling around New York City.
Novices will use Citi Bikes and will be sharing space with fast-moving cars and pedestrians. This is equal measures terrifying and amusing.
So if you are thinking about getting on a bike in NYC, whether on your own wheels or on a Citi Bike, here are 15 rules to keep you (and those around you) safe, legal, and from drawing the ire of New Yorkers.
Find bike lanes before you go. Use Google Maps’s “Bicycling” feature, or download a 2013 NYC bike map at nyc.gov.
You don't have to bike in a suit. If you can’t shower at the office or a gym nearby, consider biking in a t-shirt, then changing once you’ve arrived. Bring deodorant.
Take your time. Just like you can walk instead of run, you can bike slowly instead of quickly. Cycling can be a “fast form of pedestrianism,” rather than exercise. That cuts down on the stress and the sweating.
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