Adaptive BIKETOWN Portland
Portland Bureau of Transportation
Portland, Oregon - Multnomah County
Source checked
May 30, 2026
Portland-Vancouver
Strong listing detail
Map and directions
Based on the public address we found.
1120 SW 5th Avenue, Portland, OR 97204
Maps can place pins differently from provider pages. Confirm the current location, entrance, parking, and session site before visiting.
Quick answer
Adaptive BIKETOWN Portland has public information connected to inclusive, adaptive, sensory-friendly, disability, accommodation, or special recreation details. This listing includes multiple practical details families can review before contacting the provider. Scan the facts below, then confirm current fit directly with the provider.
Know a family who might use this?
Send this listing to a parent, caregiver, teacher, therapist, coach, or provider so they can check the source links directly.
Provider overview
Adaptive BIKETOWN is Portland's adaptive cycling resource, with PBOT information about adaptive bike access, service updates, newsletter updates, and city contacts for questions.
Portland Bureau of Transportation manages city transportation programs, bike-share information, and Adaptive BIKETOWN updates.
Quick facts
- Registration
- We did not find this in the public sources we checked
- Phone
- 503-823-4000
- Ages
- People living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional two-wheeled bike; families should confirm current age and rental rules
- Season
- Adaptive cycling service is subject to operator updates; the source references a service gap through May 2026 and newsletter updates
- Cost
- Families should confirm whether service has restarted, rental cost, deposit, transfer support, bike fit, caregiver role, and trail location directly.
Location contacts
Public contacts that may help you reach the right office. Confirm before visiting.
Families should confirm whether adaptive bike rentals are currently operating before planning a visit because the source notes an operator transition and service gap.
Programs and offerings
Source-linked details we found. Current options may differ, so confirm directly.
Adaptive cycling resource and service updates
Adaptive bike availability checks, service restart updates, transfer support questions, bike fit, rental rules, trail access, and city contact steps.
- Ages
- People living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional two-wheeled bike; families should confirm current age and rental rules
- Season
- Adaptive cycling service is subject to operator updates; the source references a service gap through May 2026 and newsletter updates
- Schedule
- PBOT posts Adaptive BIKETOWN service updates, newsletter sign-up, and contact information on the official page.
- Cost
- Families should confirm whether service has restarted, rental cost, deposit, transfer support, bike fit, caregiver role, and trail location directly.
How we checked this listing (1 public source)
Source notes only. They do not evaluate quality, safety, fit, or availability.
Listing check
- Last checked
- May 30, 2026
- Why this is listed
- Portland Bureau of Transportation's official Adaptive BIKETOWN page says it is Portland's adaptive cycling resource for people living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional two-wheeled bike, and explains service updates and contact steps.
- Sources used
- 1 public source
- Location contacts
- 1 public contact found
Program details we found
Adaptive cycling resource and service updates
Portland Bureau of Transportation's official Adaptive BIKETOWN page says it is Portland's adaptive cycling resource for people living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional two-wheeled bike, and explains service updates and contact steps.
Inclusion and support details
What the provider says: The source describes adaptive cycling for people living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional bike, adaptive bike rental history, transfer and storage needs, and PBOT contact steps.
Access notes to confirm: Families should confirm current schedule, registration steps, eligibility, cost, exact location, parking, restroom access, staff support, personal-care limits, sensory environment, transportation, caregiver role, and whether Portland Bureau of Transportation can support the participant's mobility, communication, behavior, supervision, and medical-adjacent needs.
What we checked
What we found: Portland Bureau of Transportation's official Adaptive BIKETOWN page says it is Portland's adaptive cycling resource for people living with a disability or unable to ride a traditional two-wheeled bike, and explains service updates and contact steps.
We avoid ranking, recommending, evaluating quality, or making safety claims. Use the source links and contact the provider before enrolling.
Sources used
Public pages used for this listing.
- Government sourcePortland Adaptive BIKETOWN
Please confirm current details directly before enrolling.
What to confirm
- Openings, deadlines, cost, and cancellation rules.
- Ages, eligibility, forms, and first-visit expectations.
- Support model, staff preparation, supervision, and safety policies.
- Exact location, entrance, parking, equipment, and what to bring.
Questions to ask before you register
Use these as a starting point. They are not a quality rating or recommendation.
- Do you currently have openings, waitlists, deadlines, or intake steps?
- What ages, support needs, communication needs, mobility needs, or supervision levels can this specific program support?
- What should families know about cost, financial assistance, cancellation rules, forms, and first-visit expectations?
- For sports: what equipment, experience level, classification, practice location, transportation, and caregiver participation should we plan for?
- Who should families contact to talk through accommodations before registering?
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Related resources
Common questions
Is Adaptive BIKETOWN Portland reviewed for quality by Inclusive Programs Guide?
No. This listing is informational and based on public sources. It is not a rating, ranking, quality review, or safety evaluation.
What information should families confirm with Portland Bureau of Transportation?
Families should confirm current availability, registration deadlines, eligibility, support level, staff training, safety policies, cost, schedule, and fit before enrolling.
Where did the listing information come from?
The listing is based on public source links, provider pages, public agency pages, directories, or reviewed provider-submitted updates shown on the page when available.
Inclusive Programs Guide is an informational directory based on publicly available information and provider-submitted updates. We do not endorse, recommend, medically evaluate, assess quality, guarantee safety, confirm credentials, or determine suitability of any provider, program, accommodation, or activity. Listing order, search results, ads, or sponsored placements should not be interpreted as a ranking, recommendation, or endorsement. Program details may change. Families should contact providers directly to confirm current availability, eligibility, support level, staff training, safety policies, cost, schedule, credentials, and fit before enrolling.