Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

What Bike Planners Are Missing When They Design Projects in Black and Latino Neighborhoods

Bike infrastructure matters, but in communities of color, concerns about personal safety and police profiling also affect the decision to get on a bike. Rendering: Rutgers

If your local police force has a reputation for harassing people who look like you, and your neighborhood gets a new bike lane, would that infrastructure be enough to make you feel comfortable riding?

Charles Brown, a researcher at Rutgers, has studied biking attitudes in disadvantaged communities.
Rutgers researcher Charles Brown.

It's a question that gets to the heart of new research from Charles Brown at Rutgers University. In a groundbreaking survey, Brown and James Sinclair asked New Jerseyans about their attitudes toward biking and broke down the responses by race.

Bike infrastructure matters -- bike lanes or off-street trails are one of the key features black and Latino respondents said they'd need to start biking or to bike more often. But it's not enough on its own, says Brown. "The infrastructure piece gets too much attention and the social and cultural pieces are missing," he told Streetsblog.

In the survey, black and Latino respondents were more likely than white respondents to cite fear of racial profiling or crime as a deterrent to cycling. After traffic crashes, the risk of robbery or assault was the second most common barrier to cycling cited by black and Latino respondents. Racial profiling was third.

"The challenges [for these groups] are more associated with social context than the infrastructure," Brown told listeners during a NACTO-sponsored webinar yesterday.

Reporting on his findings in the ITE Journal last September, Brown asked readers to consider how a new bikeway, sited only with consideration for traffic-related factors like crash risk, could provoke "an increase in frustration among residents if the design leads them to the very parts of town that they seek to avoid."

Brown recommends that the public planning process take into account these perspectives from the outset, and that tools used in Vision Zero efforts, like mapping pedestrian and bike deaths, be overlaid with crime maps, so that both types of safety concerns can be addressed in tandem.

Representation also matters. The Rutgers survey found that before-and-after renderings of projects depicting people of color help increase support for bike infrastructure projects.

In general, support for bike lanes and bike-share among black and Latino respondents is high, but confidence that they can secure these improvements from local government is not. In the survey, 53 percent of black respondents said it was unlikely or very unlikely that their city would make investments in cycling.

"We're not discussing power and access to power and how that impacts who gets infrastructure in their communities," said Brown. "Those discussions are not happening within the cycling context."

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Monday’s Headlines

ICE, Culver City, Waymo, Foothill A Line, World Cup, Transit Equity Day, Norwalk, car-nage, and more

February 2, 2026

Comment on Metro L.A. River Path Project by Monday, February 2

SBLA Editor recommends trimming scope towards a fiscally feasible 8-mile project, not Metro's $1B proposed design

January 30, 2026

Friday’s Headlines

ICE terror, national shutdown, participating businesses, protests, journalist arrest, ICE backlash, unity rides

January 30, 2026

Alhambra Approves New Pilot Bus Routes

City council knew rerouting wouldn’t please everyone, but eventually it passed 4-0. The bus network reconfiguration is projected to increase ridership 19%.

January 29, 2026

Thursday’s Headlines

ICE, DIY crosswalks, Waymo, LAX people mover, LAPD, Curren Price, WeHo, Measure HLA, CicLAvia, river path, Los Feliz, car-nage, and more

January 29, 2026

Wednesday’s Headlines

ICE, ULA mansion tax tweaks delayed, resurfacing, Metro D Line, car-nage, and more

January 28, 2026
See all posts