Atlanta Streets Alive


Atlanta Streets Alive is a ciclovía held throughout the year in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Ciclovía is Spanish for a temporary closing of the street to automobiles for use by people participating in recreational activity. Organized by the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition, Atlanta Streets Alive opens streets for people in the city of Atlanta by temporarily closing them to cars to create a whole new healthy, sustainable and vibrant city street experience. People can walk, bike, roller-skate, jog, skip and roll down 3 to 5 miles of major thoroughfares that have been closed to cars throughout Atlanta three or four times a summer. Throughout the route there are activities and examples of tactical urbanism inspired to help citizens envision shared streets. In 2018, the Atlanta Bicycle Coalition connected the routes for Atlanta Streets Alive with their street campaigns to drive energy towards demanding more complete and shared streets in the city of Atlanta.
The first event kickoff was held at Woodruff Park. The event has grown from around 5,000 people in 2010, to 83,000 in October 2013, and an estimated 20,000 attended the event in October 2012. 134,000 people attended the route in June 2018. Atlanta Streets Alive is part of an international open streets movement happening in many cities throughout the U.S., Canada, and around the world. Atlanta Streets Alive strives to promote healthy lifestyles and physical activity, celebrate the unique character and community spirit of Atlanta neighborhoods, reclaim public streets for people, and build demand for streets that serve all people on foot, bike, transit and in cars.

Event History

DateLocationLength AttendanceNotes-
May 23, 2010Edgewood Ave25,000-
October 17, 2010Edgewood Ave25,000-
June 11, 2011Edgewood Ave, Auburn Ave25,792-
June 25, 2011Edgewood Ave, Auburn Ave25,077-
May 20, 2012North Highland Ave215,000-
October 7, 2012Virginia Ave, N Highland Ave, BeltLine520,000-
May 19, 2013Peachtree Street2.715,000-
September 8, 2013Peachtree Street3.760,000-
October 7, 2013Virginia Ave, N Highland Ave, Boulevard582,000-
April 20, 2014West End, Atlanta2.716,000-
May 18, 2014Peachtree Street3.19,000
September 28, 2014Boulevard, North, N Highland, and Highland Ave4.595,000
April 19, 2015Ralph David Abernathy, White Street39,000
September 27, 2015Highland, Boulevard, North Ave4102,735-
October 2015Peachtree Street2.761,205-
November 8, 2015Clarkston1.5500
April 17, 2016Ralph David Abernathy, Georgia Avenue481,441
June 12, 2016Peachtree Street2.798,077
September 25, 2016Highland Ave, Boulevard390,416
October 2016Peachtree Street2.7106,188
April 23, 2017Ralph David Abernathy Blvd and Georgia Ave49,000
June 11, 2017Marietta Street and Howell Mill Road3.6110,000
September 24, 2017Peachtree Street3.1134,000
April 8, 2018Decatur Street and DeKalb Ave4.474,000
June 10, 2018Marietta Street and Howell Mill Road3.6134,000-
September 30, 2018Peachtree Street3.1

Ciclovía

The first open streets initiative was called Ciclovía, or “bikeway” in Spanish. Ciclovía started in Bogotá, Colombia and now draws over 1.5 million people to walk, bike, skate and enjoy more than 70 miles of streets opened to people – and closed to automobile traffic – every Sunday. Ciclovía was founded in 1976 in Bogotá, Colombia. It started small and grew in the 1990s under the mayor and the parks director, brothers Enrique and Guillermo Peñalosa. By 1996 it was recognized as the most important recreational activity in the country. The route was extended to 50 miles in 1997 and events to add appeal beyond biking were added.
On Sundays and holidays, the main streets of Bogotá, Cali, Medellín, and other major cities are blocked off for the event to become Carfree. From 7 AM to 2 PM, runners, skaters and bicyclists take over the streets. At the same time, stages are set up in city parks. Aerobics instructors, yoga teachers and musicians lead people through various performances. Bogotá's weekly ciclovías are used by approximately 2 million people on over 120 km of carfree streets. Thirty years later, the concept spread to many cities, including Tokyo, Kiev, and Atlanta.