Coverage analysis
What 10 minutes cycling covers in Akron.
Valley-and-escarpment city where the Cuyahoga River gorge compresses westward isochrones and I-77 is the single most important site-selection axis linking north to the Cleveland suburbs.
At 10 minutes by bike, the Akron cycling isochrone captures the micro-mobility catchment — the area where cyclists make routine, repeat trips without deliberate trip planning. Unlike a flat radius circle, the real cycling-network polygon follows Akron's actual bike lanes, greenways, and low-traffic streets — reaching further along protected corridors while contracting where motorways, rail yards, and rivers lack cycle crossings.
Coverage area at 10 minutes cycling: ≈ 4–8 km². Common applications for this zone include bike-to-work catchment mapping, micro-mobility service area design, cycling cafe and QSR proximity marketing.
The city-level population of 190,469 and a median household income of $41,800 give a sense of Akron's economic density, but the figure that matters for cycling catchment analysis is the population inside the polygon — not the city as a whole. That number shifts significantly depending on whether your origin is in a dense urban core or a lower-density suburban corridor. Use the tool above to set your actual candidate location, then generate the isochrone to see the real cycling catchment.