New York Daily News

CitiBike comes to Citi Field ahead of Mets’ Opening Day

- BY EVAN SIMKO-BEDNARSKI

Fans can now ride Citi Bike to see the Mets, after the team opened dozens of docks at Citi Field — the first time the bikeshare system has come to the stadium since its start in 2012.

“From so many different Queens neighborho­ods, we can now hop on a Citi Bike and leave our cars at home,” Jim Burke, co-founder of the 34th Avenue Open Street Coalition, said at a press conference outside the ballpark Thursday.

“It has been a remarkable sight to see so many people around all five boroughs riding bikes,” said Scott Havens, the team’s newly minted head of business operations. “I’m really, really proud that one of the first things I get to introduce is the expansion of Citi Bike, of course, here at Citi Field.”

Thirty-seven docks have been installed along the path from the stadium’s main entrance to the Mets-Willets Point station on the No. 7 train, and another 29 have been installed along the greenway near the World’s Fair Marina.

Jordan Levine — a spokesman for Lyft, which operates Citi Bike on behalf of the city — said that the firm would provide valet bike parking during early games this season, so that no one would be stuck without a dock.

The Mets host the Milwaukee Brewers next Thursday for the first game of the season.

Though the docks add another public transporta­tion option for New Yorkers hoping to catch a game, the stadium is not easily accessible via the city’s bike-lane network.

An unprotecte­d bike lane on 34th Ave. leads to the stadium from the west, but no other bike routes lead to the ballpark.

During Thursday’s press conference, multiple cyclists could be seen riding the sidewalk beneath the elevated tracks of the No. 7 train, staying out of Roosevelt Ave.’s four lanes of car traffic.

 ?? ?? Mr. and Mrs. Met welcome Citi Bike docks at Citi Field.
Mr. and Mrs. Met welcome Citi Bike docks at Citi Field.

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