April 5, 2025

Do you Give a Hoot  When you Scoot?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 3, 2025

 

Do you Give a Hoot  When you Scoot?

DOTI offers tips on  how to ride with respect, tests new mandatory parking zone

 

DENVER ­– Spring is here, and with the warmer weather, more people  are looking to use shared e-bikes and e-scooters as a convenient option to  get around the city without a car. Denver’s Department of Transportation and  Infrastructure (DOTI) is preparing for this prime time for riding,  celebrating a record-breaking year for its Shared Bike and Scooter Program,  sharing public survey results, testing a new mandatory parking zone and  promoting safe riding.

 

Ridership Record

Denver’s Shared Bike and Scooter Program, which offers  residents and visitors convenient access to e-bikes and e-scooters through a  partnership with Lime and Bird, hit an all-time annual high of  6,639,297 rides in 2024, a 27% increase over 2023, eliminating over 2.2  million car trips from Denver streets. Denver’s Shared Bike and Scooter  Program is one of the most successful in the nation – logging over 24 million  rides and replacing over 8 million car trips since 2018. Below is a graphic showing the growth of shared e-bike and e-scooter trips  in Denver over the years.

 

Scooter Survey Results

In preparation for awarding new licensing agreements next  year for the Shared Bike and Scooter Program, DOTI conducted a public survey  to gain a better understanding of who’s using e-scooters, when and why they  ride, what kinds of trips they take, and the factors that encourage e-scooter  use. The survey received over 2,500 responses from both riders and non-riders  and provided valuable insight into e-scooter use in Denver. The survey found  that e-scooters are not only fun to ride, but they are an important and  convenient form of transportation replacing car trips.  Detailed  survey results can be found here.   

 

Ride with Respect

DOTI is  continuing to evaluate best practices that encourage safe and responsible  ridership. The build-out of the City’s bike network is giving e-bike and  e-scooter users comfortable and safe places to ride while over 290 parking  corrals have been installed to promote organized parking. Also starting this  week in  partnership with Lime and Bird, DOTI is testing a new Mandatory Parking Zone  (MPZ) in the Union Station, Commons Park, and Platte Street neighborhoods  (see map below). Riders that end trips in this area  will be instructed via the Lime and Bird apps that they can only do so at a  parking corral and will be provided nearby corral locations. The goal of the  mandatory parking zone is to promote pedestrian safety and keep walkways  clear. Test results will help inform how the approach might be used in  the future and, if successful, could be expanded to other parts of downtown. Tips  on how to scoot safely and with care are being shared by Lime and  Bird as well. More information can be found at DenverGov.org/RideWithRespect  

 

To learn  more about Denver's Scooter and Bike Share Program, visit  our website.

 

 

MPZ Parking Corrals

 

Ride with Respect

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