And they built it.
Homestead trail between Beatrice and Lincoln is "open" in the sense that you can ride the entire length.
On a side note, I should blog more often.
Showing posts with label day dreaming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label day dreaming. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
If you build it, we will come!
Labels:
day dreaming,
lincoln trails,
not commuting
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Pershing Velodrome
Lincolnites approved the Haymarket Arena.
The looming question: what happens to Pershing Auditorium?
After this epic winter, my vote is Pershing Velodrome. I got really good at Mariokart in January. Just sayin'.
For those who don't know, a velodrome is a high-banked cycling track. You've probably seen one while flipping channels during the Olympic games.
I have a feeling the bicycle will be a big part of the coming decades. Bike lanes are popping up in cities all over the country. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has pledged support for safe cycling initiatives.
People already race bicycles, but as more and more people discover the bicycle as transportation, more and more people are going to seek out racing opportunities. Lincoln has the opportunity to become the midwest's winter cycling destination in the coming decades with Pershing Velodrome.
There are outdoor velodromes in Colorado Springs, Minneapolis, Chicago, and St. Louis. I like to think people in these cities want to race during the winter.
Having an indoor cycling facility and a weekly "winter racing series" from November through March can draw tourists to Lincoln who would otherwise not have visited. (Gotta get heads on pillows in Lincoln's hotels to pay for the Arena somehow...)
I also envision people from the surrounding office buildings convening at the Velodrome during the week for an "epic lunchtime spinning class".
Seriously: riding a stationary bike is the cycling equivalent of fast food: it takes the edge off and you aren't starving. You just wish it had more flavor.
I've read that Pershing is still a great structure, a testament to those hands that constructed it decades ago, but the inside needs some serious TLC.
If there's room for a track (both inside Pershing and in Lincoln), this is a great opportunity to move this aging facility into the 21st century.
Why not? Folks are trying to build a horse track.
The looming question: what happens to Pershing Auditorium?
After this epic winter, my vote is Pershing Velodrome. I got really good at Mariokart in January. Just sayin'.
For those who don't know, a velodrome is a high-banked cycling track. You've probably seen one while flipping channels during the Olympic games.
I have a feeling the bicycle will be a big part of the coming decades. Bike lanes are popping up in cities all over the country. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has pledged support for safe cycling initiatives.
People already race bicycles, but as more and more people discover the bicycle as transportation, more and more people are going to seek out racing opportunities. Lincoln has the opportunity to become the midwest's winter cycling destination in the coming decades with Pershing Velodrome.
There are outdoor velodromes in Colorado Springs, Minneapolis, Chicago, and St. Louis. I like to think people in these cities want to race during the winter.
Having an indoor cycling facility and a weekly "winter racing series" from November through March can draw tourists to Lincoln who would otherwise not have visited. (Gotta get heads on pillows in Lincoln's hotels to pay for the Arena somehow...)
I also envision people from the surrounding office buildings convening at the Velodrome during the week for an "epic lunchtime spinning class".
Seriously: riding a stationary bike is the cycling equivalent of fast food: it takes the edge off and you aren't starving. You just wish it had more flavor.
I've read that Pershing is still a great structure, a testament to those hands that constructed it decades ago, but the inside needs some serious TLC.
If there's room for a track (both inside Pershing and in Lincoln), this is a great opportunity to move this aging facility into the 21st century.
Why not? Folks are trying to build a horse track.
Labels:
day dreaming
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