New York City is a outdoorsy town, if you know where to look. From climbing in Central Park to surfing at Rockaway, a paradise is waiting for those that put the effort in. And that goes for cycling, too. Now sure, many of the roads are still dominated by drivers in vehicles that are clearly too big for their needs and patrolled by cops who are all too willing to turn a blind eye to their dangerous, unlawful behavior. But those of us who prefer to travel on two wheels have a lot going for us. Each year, the city builds more on-street and protected cycling infrastructure that allows anyone to ride more safely to work, do errands, and hangout with friends. And if you decide you want to ride a little harder, there are two beautiful parks with long loops of road that are completely closed off to cars.
The infrastructure has given our city several thriving cycling subcultures—there’s plenty of commuters, casual social riders, bike messengers, and strong racers—with one notable exception. Those who like to mountain bike, who want to send it over roots through lines of narrow singletrack, launch themselves off jumps, navigate between long berms, and feel the thrill that comes with narrowly avoiding a crash into a rock garden, are often disappointed by what’s available in the Big Apple. Many assume that finding dirt church requires getting your bike on a car to drive it out into Long Island or Westchester, where trail is more obviously available.
You know what they say about assumptions.
Wedged into a greenspace that is bordered and intersected by expressways, there exists a park in New York City where you will find 6.5 miles of twisty singletrack. Cunningham Park, found in the part of Queens that’s so far east it’s almost Long Island (almost!), features a relatively level forested area that is home to a range of trails that can be enjoyed by mountain bikers of any experience level. I should know—this spring, I visited the park with a group of cyclists that included a few people who had never rented a Citi Bike. While testing the new Lauf eElja, I watched these folks start the day cautiously inching along even the slightest turn, feet firmly planted on the ground. By the end of our quick session, they were ripping it around the green trails at full speed, and asking whether they could take more time to explore some of the more challenging stuff the park had to offer.
Though our visit was brief, the experience convinced me more people should know that mountain biking in NYC—via Cunningham Park—exists. Below, I offer a quick guide to the area’s history and trails, ways to get there by bike or train, and where I’d go to rent a mountain bike in the area right now.
Your Guide to MTB in NYC

Photo by Sean Dougherty courtesy Lauf Cycles
The History of Cunningham Park’s Mountain Bike Trails
The area currently known as Cunningham Park, which like most of Long Island was once home to the Lenape people, has been part of the city’s park system since the early 20th century. It is a part of a belt of parks that runs along a former route of the Central Railroad of Long Island. For most of the park’s history, mountain biking was explicitly prohibited. It was imagined as an activity that would destroy the park’s native plants and could harm wildlife. The problem was the park was basically abandoned, filled with trash, needles, and burnt-out cars.
“[People would use it] to dump garbage, sell drugs, and have illicit sex,” said Jerry Emerson, who opened Peak Bicycle Pro Shop with his wife Joani in the nearby town of Douglaston in 1998. Given this context, most mountain bikers felt unconvinced that their technically illegal activity was going to get them in trouble. And anyway, the paths available for them to use were pretty limited in length and intrigued. “They were walking trails,” Emerson says, with few technical features that would excite experienced mountain bikers.
Changing this was a process that took the better part of a decade, mostly thanks to the advocacy and sweat equity of Michael Vitti. Vitti, then the president of the advocacy group Concerned Long Island Mountain Bicyclists got in touch with the New York City Parks department and offered to build and maintain trails at no cost to the city. NYC called it a deal. The initial build ended up taking a few years, with help from Green Apple Corps, AmeriCorps, and Friends of Cunningham Park, and the park’s trails officially opened in 2007. The trails are still maintained by volunteers from CLIMB like Jim Martinez, who recently hosted me and a group of journalists and influencers who were visiting the park to test the new Lauf eElja e-mountain bike.




