Bike-time mapping · Ohio · City-wide cycling catchment

30 Minutes By Bike From Akron, OH

Thirty minutes on a bike covers 7–9 km and represents the outer limit for regular utility cycling. Bike shops, brewery taprooms, and urban recreation destinations draw from this zone. It is also the standard service-area zone for docked and dockless bike-share systems.

41.0814° N · 81.5190° W · Akron city center

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Coverage analysis

What 30 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 30 minutes by bike, the Akron cycling isochrone captures the city-wide cycling catchment — a zone where cycling trips are purposeful — riders cross neighbourhood boundaries for specific destinations. 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 30 minutes cycling: ≈ 30–60 km². Common applications for this zone include bike-share service area design, brewery and urban recreation catchment analysis, bike shop trade area planning.

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.

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