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Bike to Work Day, May 14, 2009


Photo: Noah Berger


Photo: Noah Berger


North Berkeley BART Photo: Sean Co


Berkeley Bicycle Pedestrian Bridge over I-80
Photo: Sean Co


MTC Commissioner Ken Yeager Photo: David Beaty


Photo: Noah Berger


Photo: Noah Berger


Photo: David Beaty


Frank Ogawa Plaza - Pancake Breakfast, 14th & Broadway
Photo: Sean Co


Sproul Plaza, Bancroft & Telegraph, University of California, Berkeley
Photo: Sean Co


Sproul Plaza, Bancroft & Telegraph, University of California, Berkeley
Photo: Sean Co


Sproul Plaza, Bancroft & Telegraph, University of California, Berkeley
Photo: Sean Co


Redwood City Caltrain Station Photo: David Beaty


Redwood City Caltrain Station Photo: David Beaty


Photo: Peter Beeler


Photo: Peter Beeler


Photo: Peter Beeler


Golden Gate Bridge Photo: Noah Berger


Connor Doyle of San Jose Photo: David Beaty


See photos from Bike to Work Day 2008

See photos from Bike to Work Day 2007

See photos from Bike to Work Day 2006

See photos from Bike to Work Day 2005

See photos from Bike to Work Day 2004

Official Bike to Work Day
site

Team Bike Challenge
Form your team and pedal for prizes during the month of May.


East Bay Stories

SF Bicycle Coalition News Release

Video: San Francisco Press Conference

Participation Highest Ever for Bay Area's Bike to Work Day


MTC Planner Dresses Up for Bike to Work Day


MTC bicycle planner Susan Heinrich normally goes for comfort and practicality when choosing her attire, wearing flats to the office most days. But on Bike to Work Day on May 14, 2009, she donned stylish navy-blue, mock patent-leather pumps with two-inch heels before hopping aboard her bike for the ride from her home in San Francisco’s SOMA to the Caltrain station on her way to catching the morning’s bicycle action on the Peninsula and the South Bay. We caught up with Heinrich when she arrived back at the office in Oakland midday, bicycle helmet on her head and high-heels on her feet, with the hemline of her right pant leg daintily rolled up to prevent the material from catching in the gears – all the better to reveal the glint of her pumps.

The message?

“I want to show that anyone can bike to work or for everyday errands, wearing pretty much anything,” she said. “You don’t have to wear spandex or shorts, and tennis shoes. You don’t have to allow time to change clothes, or lug along an extra outfit or pair of shoes. A woman can bike quite easily in heels or a skirt.”

Heinrich completed her Bike-to-Work Day look with a pair of handmade wire earrings artfully shaped into bicycles, and a matching pin.
— Brenda Kahn