- Relevant callout from https://bikemap.nyc/about:
* Limitations *
The data only contains the start and end station for each trip, but does not contain the full path. Route geometries are computed for each (start station, end station) pair using the shortest path from OSRM.
This means that the computed routes are directionally correct but inexact. Trips that start and end at the same station are filtered out since the route geometry is ambiguous.
- This is now top of my list as one of my favorite data visualizations I've ever seen. I remember spending some time with data for Capital Bikeshare data in DC, which was also public at one point, though looks like it only goes through 2016: https://capitalbikeshare.com/system-data. Would love to see the Lime/Bird version of this. Thanks for sharing.
- Cool project. Thanks for sharing!
The link above points to a 404 error page on GitHub. Looks like you forgot the hyphen in the name part of the url.
I’m working with subway data, particularly the A subway line, 32 mi long with about 2million trips over 6 months across 66 stations. Trying to train a convlstm to learn the spatiotemporal propagation of train headways.
- I really wish Lyft invested in maintenance. I used Citibike this week for the first time in about a year, and the Hudson River Greenway dock by NY Waterway had 1/3 of its empty docks broken with flashing red lights, then about 5 ebikes that needed service.
by wiredfool
1 subcomments
- Interesting that citibike publishes trip level data. The bike share schemes in Dublin only publish station counts or free bike locations. So you can see the overall pattern of bike motion, but there’s no way to see how many north side trips go to the docks vs Heuston station vs the city center.
- non corrupted github link: https://github.com/freeman-jiang/bikemap.nyc
Cool visualization.
Do you find the OSRM shortest path routes probable for bikes? Not living in NYC, I expected pretty different paths. Say the "Hudson River Greenway" or whatever that's called.
by rorylawless
0 subcomment
- This is awesome. I had no idea Lyft publishes ride data, time to explore the DC version!
by 7777777phil
0 subcomment
- This is just so cool! Not much more to add. Thanks a lot for sharing!! Great work :)
by IvoCrnkovic
1 subcomments
- I've seen many visualizations of the citibike data over the years, this is one of the most charismatic for sure!
by frakkingcylons
0 subcomment
- this is really nice. One request: when searching for a station name, let me type "and" instead of "&" e.g. typing "E 47th St and 2 Ave" would still return "E 47th & 2 Ave".
- How was the data gathered? They just publicly show the bike's locations?
- It says “entire history” but seems to start at Jan 1, 2025?
- How is MapBox going for this free tool? Is it costing you money?
- It's often interesting to observe the different ways that privacy is approached in the US and Europe.
In Europe we often accept pretty grave restrictions of our liberty like the UK's Online Safety Act, which would never fly in the US, and we do so without much public comment.
On the other side of things, organisations in the US happily expose datasets like this one, which would give a most EU Data Protection Officers a heart attack, and nobody bats an eyelid.
- Awesome work!