Portland State research gives walking and bicycling their due as key pieces of a transportation system, exploring the choice to walk or cycle and how to make those options safer. It also looks at the economic factors of a system suited to cyclists and pedestrians. Our faculty, research staff and students at PSU are national experts in designing safe, effective and innovative bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure.

Our Workshops in Portland, Oregon

For over a decade we have been hosting a diverse mix of one to multi-day workshops that train active transportation professionals, sharing the knowledge gained from our research and collaborations with fellow bike-ped organizations. Since 2007 we’ve trained 740 people from 45 U.S. states and 6 countries! Most notably, 45 colleagues from across the border in Canada have traveled to Portland, Oregon for these trainings. Fill out this form to be notified when we announce the next IBPI trainings.

Currently, we offer three flagship IBPI workshops in Portland:

Check out photos from all of our IBPI programs over the last decade or more.

Partner Events

We’ve partnered with many organizations over the years - both locally and nationally - to encourage cross collaboration and knowledge sharing in active transportation: the Association for Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals (APBP), the Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center (PBIC), the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT), and consulting firms in the city of Portland and WA County metro. Some major events we have provided leadership on:

2019 APBP Conference
With over 350 attendees, the 2019 conference of APBP was held on August 25-28, 2019 in Portland, Oregon. The Local Host Committee was chaired by TREC at PSU’s Cait McCusker, with additional support from PSU faculty and staff on the committee, in the program, and with tours.

2016 Open Streets Summit
Held August 18-21, 2016, the 3rd International Open Streets Summit was hosted over 170 attendees at Portland State University. The Open Streets Project is an advocacy project led by The Street Plans Collaborative, and the 2016 conference was organized by Street Plans, 8–80 Cities, the City of Portland Bureau of Transportation, and TREC at PSU.

A major program of the Transportation Research and Education Center, the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI) advances active transportation research and design for professionals, educators, and university students through training, curriculum development and scholarships.

Founded in 2007, we work with Portland State University faculty in urban studies and planning and civil engineering to conduct interdisciplinary research and integrate bicycle and pedestrian topics into our university courses to support the next generation of professionals. Our location in Portland, Oregon – a national leader in multimodal travel – provides the ideal environment to teach safe, convenient and accessible active transportation and promote a culture of walking and biking.

Through our IBPI program we have worked closely with community partners, policymakers, and consultants, including the City of Portland Bureau of Transportation, Metro, Alta Planning + Design, the Street Trust, and Oregon Walks on collaborative research initiatives. 

Offered through our long-standing program, the Initiative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI), we convene Portland's leading experts to teach multi-day workshops for active transportation professionals looking to hit the ground running (or cycling!) as they design multimodal options in their communities. We've been teaching these essential design skills for over a decade now, and have tutored over 550 professionals, from 34 states and 5 countries with many success stories.

Our experiential learning opportunities serve as a valuable source of knowledge, connections, and inspiration to each cohort. Want to be notified when we announce the next trainings? Fill out this interest form.

Student Study Abroad: Sustainable Transportation

This two-week Portland State University course (5 credits CE 495 / 595) offers an immersive experience to explore international approaches to cycling, transit, innovative mobility and land use. The curriculum provides a comparison between U.S. and European problems, priorities, and solutions. Specific emphasis on planning and engineering principles, policy, and practice will be explored through field trips, tours and guest lectures, while visiting The Netherlands, Sweden, or Denmark. Students completing this course will develop a broader understanding of sustainable transportation issues and expand their toolkit for context-sensitive solutions. We’ll examine how the urban areas and transportation systems of these countries have been designed to promote transportation by foot, bicycle, and public transit. Learn more about the annual study abroad.

Integrating Bike-Ped Topics into University Transportation Courses (for Faculty)

Hosted every summer since 2012, this two-day course is designed to help transportation planning and engineering faculty integrate bicycle and pedestrian topics into their courses. We focus on a holistic approach to teaching transportation engineering and planning by integrating design for bicycles and pedestrians. You'll gain an understanding of state-of-the art practice as well obtain learning materials and resources to broaden your curriculum and course design. Learn more about the annual Integrating Bike-Ped Topics into University Transportation Courses workshop.

Comprehensive Bikeway Design

As Portland, Oregon has put bikeway plans into effect, we’ve learned what works and what doesn’t—how to plan effectively, design correctly and make investments that get results. We’ve distilled those lessons into this course, which covers the fundamentals of bikeway design and planning through an intensive week of interactive classroom, field tours, and design exercises. Instructors draw from their years of experience, along with project examples, to highlight practical applications of the principles and techniques covered. The pioneers and leading practitioners in the field will teach the fundamentals of bikeway planning and design through an intensive week of classroom sessions and tours. The instruction and interaction with other participants will bring you up to speed on innovative practice and research and teach you the skills and techniques you need to get started on your next project. Learn more about the annual Comprehensive Bikeway Design Workshop.

Creating Effective Active Transportation Programs

This three-day workshop offers strategies for building and strengthening communities around increased walking and bicycling. You'll learn and experience firsthand the design of various, successful active transportation programs that incorporate these strategies. We kick it off with city staff on a behind-the-scenes learning tour of Portland's Sunday Parkways, the city's premiere Open Streets initiative that attracts over 80,000 participants annually. The subsequent days will delve into other transportation demand management and transportation options programs that play a key role in helping more people to bike, walk, and use transit. This course offers insights and strategies to make the case for policymakers, inspire communities, and build a movement toward healthier, more active cities. Learn more about the Creating Effective Active Transportation Programs workshop. 


 

The PSU Transportation Summer Camp will not be hosted in 2024, but we hope to make it available again in the future. Want to be notified of future summer camp opportunities? Sign up here to be notified

Hosted at Portland State University since 2016, our week-long summer camp is free and open to any Oregon student entering the 9–12 grade. It offers an immersive introduction to transportation careers and the workings of transportation systems in Portland. Students will hear from guest speakers, develop data collection and STEM skills, and go on daily field trips. While on the PSU campus you will:

  • Meet local professionals in transportation and learn about the broad range of transportation careers and sectors.
  • Understand the social justice and equity issues within transportation and how it relates to you, your family and your neighborhood.
  • Get to know the transportation systems in Portland and become familiar with the Portland State University campus
  • Connect with other high school students who are also passionate about careers in transportation, and have fun!

Portland State University is a host site for the FHWA's National Summer Transportation Institute program.

Established in 2009, the Transportation and Communities Summit was originally known as the Oregon Transportation Summit, and has since become the Pacific Northwest's premier transportation conference. The summit brings together professionals from all areas of transportation: planners, engineers, advocates, policymakers and community leaders. Expanded to a two-day event in 2016, we started offering interactive, hands-on workshops along with breakout sessions, networking opportunities, and leading keynote speakers who offer an outside-the-industry perspective.

**Due to COVID-19, we have postponed planning new gatherings.**

2019 Transportation and Communities Summit

2018 Transportation and Communities Academy

2017 Transportation and Communities Summit

2016 Transportation and Communities Summit

2015 Transportation and Communities Summit

2014 Oregon Transportation Summit

2013 Oregon Transportation Summit

2012 Oregon Transportation Summit

2011 Oregon Transportation Summit

2010 Oregon Transportation Summit

2009 Oregon Transportation Summit (no archived materials available)

The Ann Niles Active Transportation Lecture, first established by an endowment from Ann Niles in 2011, is a unique opportunity to bring world-class thinkers on pedestrian and bicycle issues to Portland State University (PSU) and the active transportation community in the Portland metro region. The annual lecture serves as a legacy to Ann Niles who was a strong advocate for livable neighborhoods and safer pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure, and served on many transportation-focused boards and committees in Portland. The forum furthers the mission of our Initative for Bicycle and Pedestrian Innovation (IBPI) program to facilitate the exchange of knowledge among scholars, practitioners and community advocates around issues of active transportation. The Ann Niles speakers offer a fresh perspective and driving passion for safe, healthy, and sustainable active transportation. By promoting dialogue across disciplines and interests, this lecture series supports PSU's mission to "let knowledge serve the city." 

2024 ANN NILES SPEAKER: Ray Delahanty, CityNerd

Ray Delahanty is the creator behind CityNerd, a YouTube channel that explores urbanism, transportation, and all the things that make cities unique. The channel's point of view is strongly influenced by his professional background in transportation planning and traffic analysis. Prior to starting his YouTube channel in 2021, Ray's career spanned 15 years as a planner and project manager for consulting firms and public agencies in Portland, Oregon. Ray is a graduate of Portland State University's Master of Urban and Regional Planning Program.

See more details about the May 2024 lecture.

 

2023 ANN NILES SPEAKER: Lynn Peterson, Oregon Metro Council President

Author of Roadways for People: Rethinking Transportation Planning and Engineering, Lynn Peterson’s career has led her on a journey from building projects to building communities that work for everyone. Lynn’s 30-year-plus transportation career has covered an impressive range of experience. From building and designing roads to serving as an elected and appointed official in both Oregon and Washington, respectively, she has worked on policy and implementation of transportation projects and trained State DOTs on forward-thinking transportation planning processes. Nationally recognized as a transportation and land use integration expert, she understands the pitfalls of being a White urban woman working with communities that are culturally and racially different from her own.  She also recognizes that in order to do her best work, she must always strive to keep an open heart and mind in order to understand the perspectives of individuals in her communities.

See more details about the May 24, 2023 Lecture & Luncheon

Due to COVID-19 and campus safety, we were not able to host our annual Ann Niles lecture in 2020-22.

PAST ANN NILES SPEAKERS

2019 - Angie Schmitt, Streetsblog USA

 Angie Schmitt is the editor of Streetsblog USA. Streetsblog is a daily news site that connects people to information about how to reduce dependence on cars and improve conditions for walking, biking, and transit. Since 2006, their reporters have broken important stories about efforts to prevent pedestrian injuries and deaths, build out bicycle networks, and make transit more useful. Angie has been reporting on the movement for sustainable transportation for nine years and is a frequently cited expert. She is currently writing a book about the pedestrian safety crisis, to be published in 2020 by Island Press. Angie holds a degree in urban planning and lives in Cleveland, OH with her husband and two young children.

Watch a video of the 2019 lecture, or read BikePortland's recap of the lecture.

2018 - Elise Roy, Human-Centered Designer

Elise Roy is a deaf human centered designer, former lawyer, and motivational speaker who works in the vanguard of the disruptive innovation movement. She is a passionate proponent of the notion that when we design for disability, we often develop solutions that are better than when we design for the norm. A highly skilled public speaker, she has given talks at Microsoft, the U.S. Institute for Peace, the United Nations, and the World Bank. Her TEDx talk, "When we Design for Disability, We All Benefit," has over 1.2 million views. Elise’s deafness has always given her a heightened awareness of how profoundly design shapes the social, emotional and physical environment and this led her to study human-centered design in Maryland Institute College of Art’s (MICA) Social Design program. She completed a master’s degree with a thesis that investigated the barriers that exist for individuals with hearing loss in the fabrication technology and design realm. In 2016 Elise founded Elise Roy & Associates, a social enterprise that helps organizations analyze problems from the vantage point of people with disabilities to disrupt markets and industries. The organization is founded on the notion that when we design for extremes we come up with better solutions than when we design for the norm.

Learn more about Elise Roy, and the read a recap of the 2018 lecture.

2017 - Tamika Butler of the Los Angeles Neighborhood Land Trust

Tamika Butler, executive director of the Los Angeles Neighborhood Land Trust, delivered the 2017 Ann Niles Active Transportation Lecture. She is an advocate and activist who works in support of LGBTQA rights, as well as fighting for social justice and healthy communities. Her message was about empowering historically marginalized communities. She moved to Los Angeles from Omaha, Nebraska, and became interested in active transportation when she met her wife. It was on bike rides that she fell in love with the city. Uniquely positioned as a queer black woman to understand what marginalized people experience every day, she brought passion, energy and intersectionality to the quest for better bicycle access as the executive director of the Los Angeles Bicycle Coalition. In her new role with the L.A. Neighborhood Land Trust, she continues to help address social and racial equity through building parks and gardens in park-poor communities across Greater Los Angeles.

Learn more about Tamika Butler, or watch the video of her 2017 lecture.

2016 - Vanessa Garrison of GirlTrek

In 2016, the lecture was given by Vanessa Garrison, CEO and co-founder of GirlTrek, the largest public health nonprofit for African-American women and girls in the United States. GirlTrek has mobilized more than 100,000 black women and girls since 2011 to start changing their lives and their communities for the better. With nearly 100,000 neighborhood walkers, GirlTrek encourages women to use walking as a practical first step to inspire healthy living, families, and communities. As women organize walking teams, they mobilize community members to support monthly advocacy efforts and lead a civil rights-inspired health movement. Garrison's lecture wove together elements of social justice, passion for change, and the drive toward a healthy, fulfilling lifestyle. 

Learn more about Vanessa Garrisone or read a recap of her 2016 lecture.

2015 - Seleta Reynolds of the Los Angeles Department of Transportation

Seleta Reynolds of the Los Angeles Department of Transportation delivered the 2015 Ann Niles Active Transportation Lecture. Reynolds, the head of a 2,000-employee department, offered a perspective on striving for equity in a huge, diverse city. Despite its reputation as a city built for automobiles, Los Angeles has made huge strides toward promoting active transportation and transit. In a diverse city with a unique land use and transportation system, however, serving all residents poses a challenge. Heading an ambitious plan that included doubling the number of people riding bikes, Reynolds encountered issues such as nurturing a walking and cycling culture in low-income communities and making sure the wave of transportation technology doesn’t leave some groups behind. 

Learn more about Seleta Reynolds or review her 2015 lecture presentation.

2013 - Jean-François Pronovost of Vélo Québec

The inaugural Ann Niles Active Transportation Lecture was given in 2013 by Jean-François Pronovost, vice president for development and public affairs at advocacy group Vélo Québec. One of the most notable projects for Vélo Québec is La Route Verte (The Green Route), a 5,000-kilometer-plus bicycle route across Canada's largest province. La Route Verte crosses rural areas, towns and cities and incorporates all types of bikeways. The route got its start in 1992, when Pronovost was organizer of the Velo Mondial conference. There, Vélo Québec presented a vision and plan for what cycling could be at the turn of the century. The efforts paid off in 1995, with the provincial government investing $88.5 million and tasking Vélo Québec to plan and build the route. La Route Verte is now the most extensive bike route in North America.

Learn more about Jean-François Pronovost, or review his 2013 lecture presentation.

Data-driven policy and strategy are critical to meeting transportation goals. Where there is insufficient or incomplete data, there can be no effective solutions. It’s why we’ve focused our research efforts on filling data gaps, and why we house two national data clearinghouses – PORTAL and BikePed Portal – aimed at making transportation data more easily accessible to researchers and practitioners.

Notify me about transportation data education opportunities

Another key aspect is education. Over the years we have hosted a variety of offerings that support data collection and analysis, including:

  • Webinar Series: Webinars focused on the issues and topics important to multimodal transportation data, led by the TREC Transportation Data Manager, with support from our PORTAL partners.
  • Multi-Day Courses
    • Data Science Course - Part 1: Introduction to Scientific Computing for Planners, Engineers, and Scientists
    • Data Science Course - Part 2: Intermediate Scientific Computing for Planners, Engineers, and Scientists
  • Full and half-day Workshops
    • Survey Design: Asking the Right Questions
    • Data Analysis for Smarties Who Forgot What They Learned in College
    • R for Transportation Data Science: Application and Best Practices
    • QPED Toolkit - Qualitative Pedestrian Environments Data for better, more equitable transportation decision-making
    • Using novel data sources to support transportation planning and analysis
    • Using the PORTAL Data Archive
  • And many more seminars, panels and webinars (see our playlist of past recordings) on transportation data topics like: Counting the Underrepresented in Transportation Data: Bicyclists and Pedestrians; Fair and Accurate Data: Equity-informed Approach to Representation; and more.

Learn more about our key transportation data research and applications here.

One of the ways in which we seek to inform transportation decision making is through the education of current and future transportation professionals. To that end, we host one or more webinars per month, covering a wide range of research topics that advance mobility for people and goods

These webinars are supported by a variety of grants and partners, primarily funded by our National Institute for Transportation and Communities (NITC) - one of seven national University Transportation Centers (UTC) of the U.S. Department of Transportation.

All of our webinars are provided to the public for free, and recorded and archived on our site for anyone to access. To get notifications of upcoming seminars and webinars, sign up for our monthly newsletter here.