Corp Comm Connects

Markham Cycles Launches at Milliken Mills Community Centre & Library

Markham.ca
July 4, 2019

Over one quarter of all trips in Markham - or 260,500 trips a day - are 5km or less, a distance that could easily be biked. Markham Cycles: Incubating Cycling Hubs in Suburban Canadian Communities is a new project launching in Milliken Mills that is hoping to tap into this potential. Funded by Environment and Climate Change Canada and led by The Centre for Active Transportation (TCAT) at Clean Air Partnership, the project’s goals are to engage residents in climate change action by increasing opportunities for cycling in Markham.

“It’s a fantastic opportunity to work with the City of Markham to engage the community in tangible climate action,” said Nancy Smith Lea, Director at The Centre for Active Transportation. “Markham is part of York Region which has one of the highest per capita transportation emissions in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area. This offers promising potential for increasing cycling.”

Today, the project team launched a community bike hub at the Milliken Mills Community Centre & Library. This summer and fall, the hub will host community rides and bike repair workshops, a bike mentorship and loan program, e-bike try-outs and bike related activities at Milliken Mills High School. Participants will be encouraged to track their own carbon transportation emissions and look for opportunities to make greener travel choices.

The Markham Cycles Hub, located in a repurposed shipping container, will be enhanced with fabulous graphics that tie in how cycling can be incorporated into our lives. The artist, Jessica Chan, a local architecture student and intern with Markham’s Public Realm Department, held two drop-in sessions at Aaniin Community Centre to gather ideas and is working with the Markham Cycles Advisory Committee on the final design. As part of our Public Realm Strategy, Markham is actively working to enrich our public spaces, provide a sense of identity, and create beauty where once there was none.

“The City of Markham is proud to be a municipal leader in sustainability,” says Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti. “Our Municipal Energy Plan outlines our ambitious goals to reduce carbon emissions by 2050, we believe in creating a green Markham and walking and cycling are key components. Programs like M arkham Cycles create a culture of cycling, opportunity for social interaction and enhances a sense of community, while keeping you healthy and active.”

Markham Cycles will address social barriers to cycling in Markham, build institutional capacity among local agencies and individuals to support cycling, support action to reduce transport-related greenhouse gas emissions in Markham, and highlight the benefits of cycling, such as community building, physical activity and affordable transportation. 

For photos of this event, available for viewing and download, go to markham.ca/photos.

What:
Markham Cycles Launch Party

Where:
Milliken Mills Community Centre & Library
7600 Kennedy Road, Markham

QUICK FACTS:

To learn more at www.markhamcycles.ca