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Riding Randalls Island with the upper east side of Manhattan in the background.

Manhattan Rides Information

Best Bike Rides in Manhattan

Thanks for stopping by.  You’re looking for bike rides in Manhattan.  I’ve got rides for you.  It’s just a few steps to download them and go for a ride.

  1. Choose the ride(s).  You can purchase individually or as a bundle.  I recommend a bundle (cheaper per ride, lots of rides).
  2. Pay and download.

Where you go from here is up to you.

3. You can view the GPX file(s) on your home computer and print out the turn-by-turn findings.

or

3. You can add a GPX-reading map app to your phone and put the GPX file on your phone.  Open up the app, view the ride on the phone.  It will tell you when to turn.  Depending on the app, it can talk to you as well.  This can go in your pocket or you can purchase a mount for your bike and have phone attached to your stem or handlebars.

or

3. You can put the ride on a GPS-enabled bike computer and have it in front of you while you’re riding.

Sorry there are so many choices.  I’m trying to simplify.  But the flexibility ultimately benefits you.

Manhattan Rides Information

While New York might have the most diverse population of any city in the world (Queens is actually the most diverse borough), it is not immune to the lures of provincialism. As Manhattan is my home province, I hope my location hasn’t clouded my judgment. It’s a great place to ride. Hyper-urban it is, but it’s also very flat and dense and actually very easy for cyclists. In my estimation, the easiest borough to ride in.

Oh, the irony

It’s striking that the most urban borough also has the longest car-free bike paths in the city. Part of the reason is luck; Central Park was built before cars and has been taken over by New Yorkers keen on creating a real separation from the hyper-urban environment just outside of the park walls. The other is the idea of creating a greenway that rings the island between the roads and the rivers first took root.

Because the greenway is effectively near just about everyone in Manhattan – it is a long narrow island – just about all the rides make their way to the water and travel alongside it for at least a short stretch. Rides that take you to the water have other advantages; no cars to contend with and relatively few pedestrians, as it’s much harder for them to get to the water than it is for cyclists. And for the more popular sections of the West Side path, there are separated pedestrian walkways that mean fewer worries.

Because of the density, this is the first borough amongst equals where riding to the ride is a good idea. As a result, you’re going to be doing some street riding regardless of what you take in. The seeming chaos can be overwhelming, but taken in small doses, you can experience it, start seeing patterns, and learn how to safely surf the sea of traffic and distractions that occur on the road.

There is so much to see and do in Manhattan; I had trouble even making a small selection of non-bike activities. My bias for rides is to ride first, experience the city from the saddle, and save museums, performance halls, and the like for times when your purpose is to drink in indoor culture.

Use this advice:

Print out the PDFs or put  them on your phone.  Put the GPX files on your phone or a GPS-enabled bike computer.  Pump up your tires.  Get on your bike.  Go!

If you need a full tutorial, here’s where you find that info.  https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/2020/06/18/download-a-ride/

Here are the best bike Rides Manhattan

If you want to get them all at once.

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/best-manhattan-bike-routes/

Or buy them one at a time.

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m01-central-park-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m02-highbridge-park-mtb-trails-and-dirt-jump-park/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m03-upper-manhattan-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m04-riverside-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m05-upper-east-side-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m06-randalls-island-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m07-lower-manhattan-loop/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m08-brooklyn-and-manhattan-bridges/

https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/product/m09-governors-island/