As Strava continues to solidify its role amongst the cycling masses, as the go to app for all things data, they continue to advance its functionality and platform as the provider for riding metrics galore.
Its latest endeavor, has been to tabulate comparative performance data from 10 major cities worldwide, – over the last 12 months, as part of its Insights feature.
Best if they explain it though. 😉
From Strava
Strava, the leading global community of runners and cyclists, has launched a new interactive data platform, Strava Insights, which highlights new running and cycling data from the world’s 12 most active cities.
Strava Insights provides unprecedented comparison of cyclists and runners across the globe. With a dataset that is growing by more than 5 million activities per week, and comprises nearly a trillion GPS data points, Strava is a leader in global running and cycling data.
“Strava Insights is the culmination of analyzing billions of GPS data points and millions of athlete activities, giving never-seen-before insight into cycling and running behaviors in 12 key global cities,” said Davis Kitchel, co-founder of Strava and Strava Geo lead. “We want to give our millions of athletes a fascinating view of how their own activities compare with their fellow community members both near and far.”
The Strava Insights platform refreshes each week and shows the last 12 months of data from Strava members, allowing comparison between the 12 most active cities. As it stands, more than 30 million activities have been uploaded in the last year across these cities. Cities in Strava Insights include: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, London, Los Angeles, Melbourne, Milan, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Sao Paulo and Sydney.
A staggering 20 million cycling activities alone have been logged on Strava across the 12 most active cities in the past year, which has unveiled some interesting insights:
Most active cycling city: London logged more than 7 million rides in 12 months. The most active cycling city in the U.S. is San Francisco (2.4 million rides), ranked third behind London and Amsterdam, and just ahead of Los Angeles.
Fastest running city: Parisian runners have the fastest average pace, with 8:56 minutes per mile, besting New York City, the fastest running city in the U.S., by 19 seconds.
Earliest birds: Sydney’s cyclists record 29 percent of their rides between 6-8 a.m. In the U.S., both San Francisco and Los Angeles’ cyclists record 11 percent of their runs between 6-8 a.m.
Who are the world’s fastest city dwellers?
Paris — 8:56/mi (avg. pace) London — 9:00/mi Berlin — 9:11/mi & Melbourne — 9:11/mi Milan — 9:13/mi New York City — 9:15/mi Amsterdam — 9:19/mi Sydney — 9:33/mi Barcelona — 9:41/mi San Francisco — 9:47/mi Los Angeles — 10:26/mi São Paulo — 10:45/mi
Which city runs the farthest?
Paris — 6.2 miles (avg. distance) Barcelona — 5.9 mi & Milan — 5.9 mi Berlin — 5.8 mi Amsterdam — 5.2 mi New York City — 5 mi & San Francisco — 5 mi. London — 4.8 miles Los Angeles — 4.7 mi & Melbourne — 4.7 mi São Paulo — 4.8 mi Sydney — 4.6 mi
Which city runs the most marathons?
London — 12,888 (completed over 12 months) San Francisco —5,479 Amsterdam — 4,678 Los Angeles — 4,528 Paris — 4,200 Barcelona — 3,485 New York City — 2,698 Melbourne — 2,255 Sydney — 1,912 Berlin — 1,397 Milan — 1,241 São Paulo — 1,170
Which city cyclists ride the farthest?
Milan – 33.7 miles (avg. distance) Barcelona — 25.9 mi Amsterdam — 27.3 mi Paris — 23.4 mi Los Angeles — 20.8 Berlin — 19.8 & São Paulo — 19.8 Sydney — 19.7 & Melbourne — 19.7 San Francisco — 18.4 New York City — 17.4 London —16.1 mi
Which city cyclists ride the most?
London — 7,052,729 (uploads over 12 months) Amsterdam — 2,760,418 San Francisco — 2,380,633 Los Angeles — 2,160,023 Melbourne — 1,665,635 Sydney — 1,392,290 Barcelona — 865,661 São Paulo — 767,234 New York City — 738,451 Milan — 563,778 Paris — 529,692 Berlin — 288,182
http://insights.strava.com
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