For centuries, the bicycle has quietly reshaped human society, yet its transformative legacy often flies under the radar of popular history. Dubbed the “people’s nag” — a reference to the expensive, elite horses 19th century working classes could not access — the bicycle democratized personal travel more than 200 years ago, giving ordinary people an affordable, self-reliant way to move freely across their communities. Many observers now draw parallels between the disruptive, world-altering impact of the bicycle’s invention and the rise of artificial intelligence in the 21st century, framing the two as equally revolutionary shifts in how people live and work.
The modern bicycle as we know it traces its origins to 1885, when 30-year-old English inventor John Kemp Starley began testing new designs in his Coventry workshop. After iterating through multiple prototypes, he unveiled the Rover Safety Bicycle: a 45-pound chain-driven model with two equally sized wheels, a design that remains the baseline for bicycles produced today. From its earliest days, the bicycle rippled through every corner of culture, leaving lasting marks on art, music, literature, and fashion that endure to this day.
In recognition of the bicycle’s centuries-long contributions to global progress, the United Nations established World Bicycle Day in 2018, observed annually on June 3. The 2026 iteration of the event centers on two interconnected themes: “Cycling for a Greener Future” and “Advancing Sustainable Mobility and Inclusive Transport.” Both campaigns position the simple two-wheeled vehicle as a practical, low-cost solution to two of the world’s most pressing challenges: accelerating climate change and overcrowded, inequitable urban transport systems.
Beyond its environmental benefits, global health bodies have long emphasized cycling’s far-reaching positive impacts on public health. The United Nations notes that regular moderate physical activity — including cycling — delivers extensive health benefits for people of all age groups, and even small amounts of activity offer greater gains than no activity at all. The World Health Organization (WHO) adds that building safe infrastructure for walking and cycling is also a critical pathway to advancing health equity. For low-income urban communities that cannot afford private motor vehicles, active transport like cycling cuts the risk of heart disease, stroke, several types of cancer, and diabetes, all while providing accessible mobility for work, school, and daily needs. This makes expanded cycling infrastructure both a cost-effective and equitable investment for communities worldwide.
The bicycle’s history of advancing social progress stretches back to the 19th century, when it became a core tool for women’s liberation, granting women unprecedented mobility and personal autonomy at a time when strict social norms restricted their movement. Today, that legacy of inclusion continues through adaptive bicycle designs that make cycling accessible to people of all physical abilities. The bicycle also helps expand access to critical public services: by offering low-cost transport, it makes education, healthcare, and economic opportunity more reachable for marginalized and vulnerable populations across the globe.
The shift toward prioritizing cycling in public policy gained new momentum after the COVID-19 pandemic, which reshaped global transport needs and prompted many cities to reimagine their mobility systems as part of “build back better” recovery efforts. In March 2022, the UN General Assembly codified this momentum with a resolution calling for the integration of bicycling into mainstream public transport systems to advance sustainable development. The resolution reaffirms the bicycle’s role as a tool of sustainable transport that encourages sustainable consumption and production, and delivers tangible benefits for climate action. It also commits national governments to promote cycling for all segments of society — across ages, rural and urban communities — and foster a widespread culture of bicycling worldwide.
As communities around the globe observe World Bicycle Day 2026, organizers call on people everywhere to take actionable steps to support the day’s goals: opt for cycling over motorized transport when possible to cut carbon emissions and boost personal health, and advocate for protected, safe cycling infrastructure in local communities. Far more than just a machine for getting from point A to point B, the bicycle stands as a unifying symbol that connects people, communities, the health of the planet, and shared global progress. In the words of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy, “Nothing compares to the simple pleasure of riding a bicycle.”
This commentary was written by Wayne Campbell, an educator and social commentator focused on how development policy intersects with culture and gender issues. All views expressed in this piece are the author’s alone and have not been independently verified.
