With no breaks and G-force speeds, the sport of track cycling kicks biking into high gear. But with a limited number of velodromes in Canada, it has long been out of reach for even the most adventurous of recreational athletes 鈥 until now.

This summer, 蓝莓视频 researcher Luke Potwarka will lead a unique project designed to leverage the legacy of the 2015 Pan Am Games and bring track cycling to athletes across the Greater Toronto Area.

Leveraging a legacy

Run in聽partnership聽with the Town of Milton, the project is part of a strategic plan to ensure that the new $56 million聽velodrome, constructed specifically to host Pan Am and聽Parapan聽Am cycling events, is used to its full potential long after the international competitors have headed home.

鈥淔rom Athens to Beijing, there are many examples of mega sporting venues standing empty after the original event,鈥 said Potwarka, a professor in Recreation and Leisure Studies.聽 鈥淲e are going to make sure that doesn鈥檛 happen in Milton. But to do that, we have to work for it, plan for it and promote it.鈥

The new 1500-seat velodrome may already have a head start on its legacy 鈥 it is one of only two in North America that meets international standards. For the first time, members of the national track cycling team will not have to travel to the United States to train.

鈥淔rom the outset, the Town of Milton has planned for this facility to operate under two key principles of legacy: a world class cycling facility for Canadian athletes and a community recreation facility for the public. Our goal is to work diligently on both of these fronts to ensure maximum utilization,鈥 said Jennifer Reynolds, Director of Community Services for the Town of Milton and an alumna of the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences.聽

Try the track

Luke Potwarka in front of cycling track.

To kick start the project for the community, Potwarka will be handing out free try-the-track vouchers to randomly selected spectators after cycling competitions at the velodrome. 聽He will be collecting survey data on each recipient, including spectator experiences, previous cycling habits, and personality trait information.

鈥淚t takes an inspired person to take up track cycling,鈥 said Potwarka. 鈥淥ur goal is to not only see if on-site promotional initiatives work in this context, but also to improve our understanding of conditions and mechanisms that may influence new sport participation in the wake of a mega sport event.鈥

The two-hour try the track sessions will be offered by instructors from the Town of Milton and include both in-class and on-track components.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get too many chances to study sport participation starting at zero,鈥 said Potwarka. 鈥淔or the first time we can get base line data, because very few people have been able to take up track cycling recreationally in our region. Until now, there just hasn鈥檛 been access.鈥

Potwarka hopes the Pan Am events will inspire members of the public to not just try track cycling, but eventually become members of the facility.

鈥淲e hope to learn more about the longer-term experiences of people that enter into this new sporting world,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat better time to engage people about a new sport opportunity than right after witnessing an inspiring event?鈥