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Join us Sunday, May 19th, 2024, for the annual Tour de Elizabeth. The 15-mile route will take riders by Elizabeth's loveliest sites. Learn how to register and other details.
Get to know our community from the seat of a bicycle. Join Mayor Chris Bollwage and Groundwork Elizabeth on Sunday, May 19, 2024, for the 21st Annual Tour de Elizabeth. The 15-mile recreational ride welcomes everyone and is hosted by the City of Elizabeth, Groundwork Elizabeth, Union County Board of County Commissioners HEART grant program, the Greater Elizabeth Chamber of Commerce, Elizabeth Tourism, the Elizabeth Education Association, Elizabeth Avenue Partnership, Historic Midtown SID, and a host of partners and friends
Whether you're looking for new ways to experience the outdoors, entering the race as an expert cyclist, or trying the route as a beginner, the Tour de Elizabeth offers heart-pumping fun for bikers of all ages...No bike? No problem! Rentals on-site are available.
All riders are requested to arrive early and must sign in on the day of the event. Helmets are required for this event. Scooters are also not permitted from entering the event. Bicycles with training wheels and scooters are not permitted.
Bonus Features - First 500 pre-registered participants receive a complimentary t-shirt and free parking is available or you can ride your bike to the event.
Stay around afterward for our raffles, and then grab a bite to eat at one of our many restaurants.
It’s the day of the Tour, so you wake up early and look out the window. The clouds look like they could bring some rain, but hopefully just a nice breeze and some needed shade. Donning your brightest shirt, shorts, and sneakers, you step outside and check the tires of your trusty bike. With everything in working order, you make your way to City Hall where the ride begins and are greeted by a thousand other riders equally nervous and excited by what’s ahead. Groups of friends laugh and rib each other while strangers mingle in polite conversation about each other’s bikes. Serious racers bunch together while more casual riders are grouped to keep the everyone flowing freely through the city.
When the ride begins, you are mesmerized by the site of so many helmeted riders pumping their pedals and wishing each other good luck. Tandem bikes, mountain bikes, sleek street cycles, and toddler-trailers fill the lanes. There’s a magic in the air when a city like Elizabeth pauses long enough to let waves of cyclists move through the paved corridors to appreciate the town in a whole new way. You’re part of it and you feel alive!
As your legs push you through the first few miles, you focus on the awe-inspiring architecture around you. Century-old buildings nestle up against market shops passed down in families for generations. Depending on the chosen theme of the ride, you might cruise past historic sites marked with statues honoring the brave soldiers of the American Revolution, or twist through streets which give the best views of arch-formed bridges. Music venues, waterways, and restaurants are all highlights of this town and you’ll see plenty regardless of the route.
After a few miles, you hear panting and water-gulping from other riders, or it may be you! But you keep going, observing all aspects of the city which you overlooked on a previous stay. The parks are next and your eyes roam through the trees, taking in the blossoming flowers and twittering birds. Kids are playing soccer and doing tricks on skateboards in Mattano Park. Or you see ducks splashing around and quacking in Warinanco Park’s lake. The rain has held off and the fresh air revives you for another climb up the next hill.
Now, you’re well past the halfway point and riding through the industrial seaport section of the city. While very different from the natural beauty of other areas in and around Elizabeth, it’s a vital center for international commerce and the economy of New Jersey and the country. You’ll ride by the enormous warehouse of the old Singer Sewing machines and, to be fair, hundred-foot tall cranes moving shipping containers are a colossal marvel on their own.
The ride is almost over and you find yourself in a charming, if not luxurious, neighborhood with large yards and tall trees. You pass by the mayor’s house. A growing sound fills your ears and you realize it’s the crowd cheering you on to the finish line! Your legs are tired and the bike seat is e, but you push through the final quarter-mile and into a haven of smiles and congratulations. You’ve completed the Tour de Elizabeth, accomplished a good bit of healthy exercise, and have discovered a side of this wonder city others are completely missing out on!
You’ve come to Elizabeth, New Jersey and you want to know what all the hype is about, right? Sure, you could read reviews, but why not join hundreds of others in an incredible annual cycling event called Tour de Elizabeth?
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