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Target Population Involvement in Urban Ciclovias: A Preliminary Evaluation of St. Louis Open Streets

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Abstract

Ciclovias are active street events when roads are open to walkers, cyclists, and families and closed to automobiles. Over 70 cities in the USA have implemented ciclovias to promote physical activity. The authors evaluated four events during 2010 to determine what activities participants perform and who is attending. For two ciclovia events in St. Louis, Missouri, observation reports of activities, gender, and age of 1,452 participants were collected, and 82 adults were interviewed via direct approach. The survey covered six domains: physical activity, travel to event, sense of community, marketing, economic impact, and demographics. Each event occurred within the city, along multiple streets. Domains were selected from Ciclovia Recreativa developed by Ciclovia Bogota, Pan American Health Organization, and CDC. Additional questions addressed city-specific goals and matched similar evaluations in other cities. Over 50 % of participants met CDC-defined weekly minute thresholds for physical activity. Participants, primarily (>80 %) middle class, college educated, and white, were not representative of the majority minority city population, which has high rates of poverty, and low percentage of college graduates. Cities must work with residents to increase low-income minority population participation in ciclovia-based physical activity.

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Correspondence to J. Aaron Hipp.

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This work was supported by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation/Active Living Research grant number 68899.

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Hipp, J.A., Eyler, A.A. & Kuhlberg, J.A. Target Population Involvement in Urban Ciclovias: A Preliminary Evaluation of St. Louis Open Streets. J Urban Health 90, 1010–1015 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9759-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9759-6

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