Conferences have been or will be held in the following locations: • 1997 –
Hamilton • 2000 –
Palmerston North • 2001 –
Christchurch • 2003 –
North Shore • 2005 –
Hutt City • 2007 –
Napier • 2009 –
New Plymouth • 2012 –
Hastings (first combined walking and cycling conference) • 2014 –
Nelson • 2016 –
Auckland • 2018 –
Palmerston North • 2021 –
Dunedin (postponed from 2020)
1997 Hamilton The 1st conference was held on 15 October 1997. The conference theme was
"Planning for and Promoting Cycling in Urban Areas". Held at the
University of Waikato, the conference was the initiative of transport planner Paul Ryan.
2000 Palmerston North The 2nd conference was held on 14–15 July 2000. The conference theme was
"Making Cycling Viable". Two UK keynote speakers presented via video-link: Prof
Mayer Hillman and
John Grimshaw from
Sustrans.
2001 Christchurch opening the 2001 conference The 3rd conference was held on 21–22 September 2001. The conference theme was
"Transport for Living". The keynote speaker was Karel de Roy, a traffic engineer and transport planner from the Netherlands. The conference came about as three people from
Christchurch City Council had attended the 1999 VelOZity conference in
Adelaide: Alix Newman (the city's Cycle Planning Officer),
Axel Wilke (a design engineer with an interest in cycling), and
Denis O'Rourke (a city councillor with an interest in transport). O'Rourke was impressed by the professional knowledge sharing that such a conference can provide and announced at the 2000 NZ Cycling Conference that Christchurch would host the conference in 2001, putting Newman in charge of organising it.
2003 North Shore The 4th conference was held on 10–11 October 2003. The conference theme was
"Cycling Strategies – And How to Implement Them".
Steven Norris, the Chair of the UK National Cycling Strategy Board was the keynote speaker. The first
Cycle Friendly Awards were held in conjunction with this conference.
2005 Hutt City The 5th conference was held on 14–15 October 2005. The conference theme was
"Changing Lanes – Cycling into the Mainstream". The conference was opened by
Lower Hutt mayor
David Ogden. The
Danish engineer and senior transport planner Troels Andersen was the keynote speaker, relating the experiences from
Odense to New Zealand. The third Cycle Friendly Awards were held in conjunction with this conference.
2007 Napier The 6th conference was held on 1–2 November 2007. The conference theme was
"Getting There by Bike". The conference was attended by
Minister of Transport Annette King, who presented the 2007 Cycle Friendly Awards. Bob Chauncey from the National Center for Bicycling & Walking (NCBW) in the US was the keynote speaker. The fifth Cycle Friendly Awards were held in conjunction with this conference.
2009 New Plymouth The 7th conference was held on 12–13 November 2009. The conference theme was
"Communities, Connections and the Economy". The keynote speakers were Phillip Darnton from
Cycling England and Assoc. Prof.
Chris Rissel from the
University of Sydney. Darnton was interviewed by
Radio New Zealand's
Kim Hill prior to the conference about opportunities for cycling in New Zealand. The seventh Cycle Friendly Awards were held in conjunction with this conference.
2012 Hastings The first combined walking and cycling conference, 2WALKandCYCLE 2012, was held in Hastings on 22–24 February 2012. The conference theme was
"Creating Smarter Communities".
Vancouver-based
Melissa and Chris Bruntlett of the creative agency Modacity were keynote speakers at the conference, as were Daniel Sauter from Zurich, and the
Mayor of Wellington,
Celia Wade-Brown.
2016 Auckland The third combined walking and cycling conference was held at Auckland's Rendezvous Hotel from 6 to 8 July 2016, attended by 250 delegates. The lead keynote speaker was urban regeneration expert Gil Peñalosa from Canada, who also spoke in
Christchurch,
Wellington, and at an event titled "Auckland Conversations" organised by
Auckland City Council. Other keynotes were Dr Ben Rossiter from Victoria Walks in
Melbourne, Australia, Dr
Alessandro Melis from Italy, and Professor
Karen Witten from the
University of Auckland. The opening of the Quay Street cycleway was timed to coincide with the conference and was part of the conference programme. Prime Minister
John Key, Transport Minister Bridges, and Auckland mayor
Len Brown opened the cycleway on 8 July.
2018 Palmerston North The fourth combined walking and cycling conference was held at the Palmerston North Conference & Function Centre between 30 July – 1 August 2018, attended by 200 delegates. The lead keynote speaker was Lucy Saunders, a healthy streets expert from London.
2021 Dunedin The fifth combined walking and cycling conference was to be held in Dunedin during September 2020. On 11 August, four cases of COVID-19 were reported in
Auckland, the first from an unknown source in 102 days. This increased the COVID alert levels and the conference was postponed until the following year, when it was held from 16 to 19 March 2021 at the
Dunedin Centre. ==See also==