5Boro Interview on NY Skateboarding.com
5Boro Interview: Part 1 – “Join, or Die” Introduction (2012) from NY Skateboarding on Vimeo.
Tonight is the video premiere at Santos Party House @96 Lafayette St NY NY 10013

Found it here.
http://www.nyskateboarding.com/2012/02/5boro-interview-part-1-join-or-die-intro-2012/
And go here for more info.
2012 Ohio Trip Photos
So we drove out to Rays last night and it took us 12 Hours to get there.
Some on the trip are saying its because I was lazy, and had Tyrone Williams drive most of the way.
He was seen driving 40 MPH in a 60 MPH zone.
We got in and slept from 9am to 1130 am. and headed to Rays.
We meet with Hollywood and other NYC natives Dave Hall and Brian Burnhart.
After the Rays session we went for a private session at Chenga 57 courtesy of Cole.
Here are some photos of the crew.
This is fucking amazing! Occupy Wall Street Brooklyn Bridge take over.
Occupy Everything from socially_awkwrd on Vimeo.
How I wish I was there!
More info Here
"Why did you allow the commissioner to destroy our skate park?"
Here is a video of me asking NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe a question about the Benjamin Soto skate park on August 9th, 2011 at the Museum of New York City. More about the meeting here.
I guess he didn’t see this video.
Councilman Oddo Threatens To Cut Funds To Parks Department from Group Home Bikes on Vimeo.
Thanks Johanna at parkslope.patch.com
Animal Jam 2007
This was a good jam. I helped build the ramps with some of the Staten Dudes. It was a good time.
I love little Mikes clips.
Thanks to Yoni. for the video.
http://www.yadontunderstand.com/
Women and Biking in New York City
Last week, the New York Times stuck its toe in the waters of New York City’s bicyclist gender divide, and draws several conclusions. We’ve addressed the “Why don’t more women bike?” question before, but as biking sees an unprecedented rise in popularity —and funding — the issue has gained a few points on the public discussion Richter Scale.
The gender disparity in biking — three men currently bike for every one woman — is a constant undercurrent of the cycling debate, and has been addressed in everything from women’s biking initiatives to bike boutiques selling products just for female riders.
Media coverage of the Great Gender Divide has done a good job of narrowing down what isn’tgetting more women to ride bikes — more fashionable helmets and cuter bike colors being prime examples. But when it comes to what is working, there’s less clarity.
As we said before, safety remains a key concern for women. The Times points out that in actuality, biking is no less safe for women than it is for men (though the stats are a bit questionable given that there aren’t equal numbers of men and women riding in the first place). Still, perception is a powerful thing — if women think biking is unsafe, they are less likely to engage in it than men (this isn’t a mere generalization — it’s even been used as an argument for why men dominate high-risk fields like banking). Media contributes to the unsafe perceptions as well; when a cyclist dies, particularly when a female cyclist dies, it inevitably makes headlines.
Of course no single issue applies to ALL women, just as nothing applies to ALL men. But when you get down to the core of the women-and-biking debate, safety is the primary hurdle. Convenience – the ability to cart around groceries or shopping bags, etc. — is also a factor, as is the “I don’t want to look like a sweaty mess when I arrive at my destination” trope that always seems to get trudged out whenever the women-biking topic is discussed. But both of these still pale in comparison to safety.
Meanwhile, whether or not the “women don’t bike” mantra will be true in a few years is up for questioning. Streetsblog’s Ben Fried points out that the Times does little to note just how much progress NYC has made in growing the number of women cyclists — in fact, according to a2010 Department of Planning study he cites, the gender gap “narrowed from about 1.9 men for every woman in 2002, to about 1.7 in 2008, with most of the change happening between 2006 and 2008.” In other words, the gap is narrowing at an accelerated pace, likely because of all the money put into making biking safer over the past few years.
So what’s working as far as getting female cyclists to hit the NYC streets? Separating bike lanes from traffic – an act that goes straight to the core of the safety issue. As Fried points out:
Researchers like Harvard’s Anne Lusk, and Portland State University’s Jennifer Dill have all come to the conclusion that the share of female cyclists is higher where separation from traffic is more pronounced. Their positions are consistent with DCP’s finding that the gender gap on NYC’s greenways is substantially smaller than it is on painted bike lanes.
When you are talking about bike lanes that are separated from traffic entirely (by a real partition, as opposed to a painted white line) then the gender divide lessens dramatically. Which leads one to conclude that if we increase the number of separated bike lanes, we will increase the number of women riders. Regardless of whether they get sweaty.
Read whole story here
Bikers’ Dream: A Bronx Velodrome and Indoor Skate Park.
Bikers’ Dream: A Bronx Velodrome
Above left, the Kingsbridge Armory briefly revived six-day bicycle racing in New York in 1948. Jack Simes, far left, and Mike Green want to restore the long-vacant and much-fought-over armory, right, for cycling events.
By J. DAVID GOODMAN
DWARFED by the soaring expanse of the long-vacant Kingsbridge Armory, a small group of bike advocates and Bronx residents strolled through the main hall recently and imagined a mecca of bicycling.
Picture it: Over here, young BMX riders from the neighborhood perform tricks, spinning their bike frames and leaping over obstacles. Over there, racers warm up and cool down, as fans drink Belgian beer at an indoor bar and live bands play.
And in the center, under the lights, elite athletes from around the world zip around a smooth plywood track during six days of competition — the sort of marathon racing that once drew tens of thousands of spectators to cycling tracks, or velodromes, across New York, from Coney Island to Madison Square Garden.
“Six-day races are a blend of Broadway show, going out to dinner and high-end sporting event,” said Jack Simes, a Pennsylvania bike track developer and elite rider who led the group through this vision for the Bronx armory, New York’s largest and among the most fought-over. “We want to bring them back to New York.”
Mr. Simes and Michael Green, the former president of a local bike racing club, have founded the National Cycling Association to help create a cycling center and 820-foot track in the armory. As a first step, they plan to seek city approval to rent the fortress for a demonstration race sometime in the next year as a “proof of concept,” Mr. Simes said.
Theirs is just one of several proposals for the 285,000-square-foot space. But the dream of recapturing the glory days of the velodrome has been surprisingly common, if largely quixotic.
Jason Gallacher, a bike shop owner in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, recently had the dream, picturing bike aficionados flocking to an indoor track in Greenpoint. “I firmly believe that there needs to be a beautiful facility in this city,” he said. “We created track racing.” But his proposal has been shot down by residents, who would prefer to see a public park instead.
Josh Rechnitz and Matthew Heitman formed a nonprofit group, New York Velodrome, in 2009 to push for a track in Manhattan. The effort has faltered, and the group appears to have ceased trying.
The Kingsbridge Armory was the site of an indoor racing revival in 1948, when six-day races returned to the city, but only briefly. And the most promising plan would have built a track in the Bronx as part of the city’s bid to host the 2012 Olympics. That, too, failed.
Still, as the Bloomberg administration has beckoned bikers to the streets in recent years, many have looked back at the history of New York cycling and the heyday of urban track racing, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Then, Madison Square Garden attracted hordes of race fans to grueling competitions that, long before Nascar, featured hair-raising speed and spectacular crashes. Newspapers condemned the brutality of races in which racers pedaled nonstop for days. “The knowledge that a man can propel himself 1,769 miles in 110 ½ hours is purchased too dearly when it costs the reason and the physical well-being of the person who imparts it,” The New York Times said in an editorial in 1897.
City lawmakers responded by limiting the time a racer could ride in one stretch. But the organizers adapted, adding a second rider to relieve the first periodically in team events that came to be known as Madisons.
Modern six-day races, which are held mostly in Europe, limit the amount of cycling per day. The demonstration race that Mr. Simes and Mr. Green want to bring to the Kingsbridge Armory would feature six nights of events on a temporary track, with tickets sold for all or part of the competition.
From there, the two hope to attract strong corporate sponsors and show the city the viability of a permanent cycling center in the Bronx.
But, for the moment, the idea faces significant challenges, starting with financing. The permanent track alone would cost a few million dollars, by Mr. Simes’s estimate.
The armory has already been the battleground for a rancorous public fight over a planned mall that pitted residents against developers, and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg against the City Council.
After the mall project was scrapped in 2009, many competing proposals emerged, including a film studio, an educational complex and a home for sustainable food production. “Whatever it is, it has to add to the community,” said Kwasi Akyeampong, a community representative from the Kingsbridge Armory Redevelopment Alliance, who tagged along with the cyclists’ tour last month.
As they gazed around the drill floor, another group — dressed in business suits and talking about a hockey rink — moved quickly past. “That’s the competition,” Mr. Simes said. “But I like a horse race.”
Should the cyclists lose that race, there is still one place for bicycle track riding in New York: the Kissena Velodrome in Queens. It may not have a roof, a bar or even a subway stop close by, but racers still compete there regularly on its banked and sun-baked circuit of asphalt, as they have since 1962.
Whole Story Here.
Future indoor skate park in the Bronx

The Bronx‘s long-vacant, hotly disputed Kingsbridge Armory could become a massive cycling palace, housing a velodrome and a BMX course.
A proposal submitted this spring to the borough president’s task force calls for the rundown, fortresslike building to host international racing events and free programs for kids. The armory’s large 600-by-300-foot drill floor makes it especially appealing, said would-be developer Michael Green, former president of the Century Road Club Association.
“We want to get more young people involved in cycling,” said Green, who pointed to the success of a similar project, the 168th St. Armory Track and Field Center in Washington Heights.
The proposal for a cycling center – one of several ideas under task force review – follows a 2009 battle over a plan to redevelop the armory into an enormous shopping mall.
Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. warred with Mayor Bloomberg over the plan, and demanded wage guarantees for anyone who worked there. In 2009, the City Council sided with Diaz and voted the project down.
About a year ago, Diaz formed the task force and later commissioned a study by students from New York University‘s Robert F. Wagner School for Public Service. He’s expected to release the study’s findings soon and outline the other proposals under review.
A spokesman for the city’s Economic Development Corp. said the Bloomberg administration will “listen to all feasible proposals that include private-sector investment and use city funds responsibly.”
Green said he and his partner, Jack Simes, president of the National Cycling Association, already have financial backers for the Kingsbridge Road cycling project.
Mel Rodriguez, founder of Bike the Bronx, said a cycling center could help keep kids healthy and slim.
“I’m 100% for it,” said Rodriguez, of Co-op City. “It could help solve the problem of obesity in the Bronx.”
But local activist Desiree Pilgrim-Hunter questioned the need, saying a cycling center isn’t one of her neighborhood’s top priorities. “We need schools built. We need living-wage jobs at the armory…and affordable food options,” Pilgrim-Hunter said.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/06/20/2011-06-20_history_bronx_building_kingsbridge_armory_may_become_cycling_center_and_bmx_cour.html#ixzz1Q4H1IgTs






















