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Using Citi Bike Data to Figure Out Where Cyclists Ride

It's been a week since Citi Bike released a trove of data on bike-share trips, and the public is already using the information to pick out patterns in ridership and glean new details about the demographics of Citi Bike riders.
A new map shows likely routes taken by Citi Bike riders. Map: Oliver O'Brien
A new map shows likely routes taken by Citi Bike riders. Map: Oliver O’Brien

It’s been a week since Citi Bike released a trove of data on bike-share trips, and the public is already using the information to pick out patterns in ridership and glean new details about the demographics of Citi Bike riders.

In addition to identifying the busiest late-night stations to map nightlife hotspots, statistician Ben Wellington at I Quant NY used a neat feature in the data to show which stations attract different types of Citi Bike riders.

Riders in Midtown, for example, tend to be slightly older and overwhelmingly male. The share of female riders is highest in the Lower East Side and Chinatown. When it comes to age, however, those neighborhoods are split: The East Village has some of the system’s youngest average ridership, while users of stations near public housing and co-ops near the Williamsburg Bridge are, on average, among the system’s oldest.

Wellington also used the data to verify what many New Yorkers could tell you by intuition: Casual users who purchase day or week passes are concentrated near popular tourist destinations in Midtown, the Financial District, and along the Hudson River Greenway.

While DOT said before Citi Bike’s launch that the system would map each rider’s route, that data was not included in last week’s release. Instead of tracking actual routes, London-based geographer Oliver O’Brien created an estimate by combining Citi Bike ridership data with a map of bike lanes from OpenStreetMap. O’Brien used starting and ending locations for 5.5 million bike-share trips over eight months to map direct routes for each trip, weighting the route choice towards bike lanes and paths.

Some patterns jump off the map immediately: By O’Brien’s estimates, the most popular routes include the Eighth and Ninth Avenue protected bike lanes, Sixth Avenue, and the Hudson River Greenway in the West Village and Tribeca.

Because O’Brien’s map assumes riders are taking relatively direct routes, as opposed to the more circuitous rides some users might be taking, it is likely undercounting rides through Central Park or along the Hudson River Greenway above 14th Street, among other routes.

The new data is also enabling the creation of tools to estimate how long it will take users to make any given bike-share trip. Developer Zach Rausnitz created the Bikeshare Trip Timer, based on a similar site he created for Capital Bikeshare in Washington, DC. By using only trips taken by annual members, it focuses on users getting from point A to point B. After selecting two stations, the site pulls up a graph showing how long it took Citi Bike riders to make the journey, with comparison estimates from Google Maps.

Now, if only there were an app to guarantee a bike or an open dock when you need it…

Photo of Stephen Miller
In spring 2017, Stephen wrote for Streetsblog USA, covering the livable streets movement and transportation policy developments around the nation. From August 2012 to October 2015, he was a reporter for Streetsblog NYC, covering livable streets and transportation issues in the city and the region. After joining Streetsblog, he covered the tail end of the Bloomberg administration and the launch of Citi Bike. Since then, he covered mayoral elections, the de Blasio administration's ongoing Vision Zero campaign, and New York City's ever-evolving street safety and livable streets movements.

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