Saturday, 27 April 2024
News

British Cycling partners with Trek to grow and diversify cycling participation

British Cycling has announced Trek as the organisation’s new Community Bike Partner, which will see 500 new bikes provided to grow and diversify community participation across the country.

It is expected that the bikes will directly benefit more than 40,000 riders each year, with the majority supporting activity for children and young people, providing opportunities for them to learn new skills and build up their confidence.

The three-year partnership will directly support the work of British Cycling’s network of Community Coaches, and the growth of the City Academies programme, which launched in 2021 with the Rapha Foundation to create new pathways into the sport for riders from diverse ethnic communities and lower socio-economic groups. Following early success in London, with the support of Sport England the programme was this year extended to the West Midlands, with City Hubs now operational in Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Dudley.

Trek X BC partnership providing bikes to new rides from communities typically underrepresented in cycling. 

Child stands in field with Trek bike and helmet British Cycling CEO, Jon Dutton, said: “Our Community Coaches do brilliant work to help people from all different backgrounds to build up their confidence, develop new skills and discover the joy of cycling. We’re incredibly thankful to Trek for their support over the next three years and look forward to working with them to widen access to the sport in communities across the country.”

The partnership announcement follows a successful pilot project delivered by British Cycling and Trek in Sheffield in 2022, which saw the two organisations deliver mountain bike skills sessions across eight schools in the city. The pilot reached more than 3,000 young people, with five teachers receiving training to continue delivering sessions in the future.

Trek’s UK+ Marketing Manager, Helen Guesford, said: “This programme and the Community Coaches network reduces boundaries to accessing bikes whilst developing cycling skills and confidence to open the world of cycling to everyone, whatever the background or skill level. We are excited to join forces with British Cycling to help this initiative grow, and ultimately inspire children, young people and communities to cycle and discover the countless benefits it has to offer.”

British Cycling’s Community Coaches are based across our local partnerships in Colchester, Coventry, Leeds, Leicester, London, Manchester, Nottingham, Plymouth, Sheffield and the West Midlands. The partnerships are a key part of our work to tackle inequalities in cycling and get more people on bikes, in tandem with the generous support of Sport England.