Crowdsourced ride data is only useful if the people who fund and build cycling infrastructure can act on it. So we built three tools that turn Party Onbici’s data into things a council officer, an employer, a grant assessor, or a community group can understand in a single glance — and circulate the same afternoon.

Meet the Civic Activation Suite: a Community Consultation Map, auto-generated Corridor Prospectus pages, and a Pilot Proposal & ROI Simulator.

🗺️ Community Consultation Map — the community’s voice on the map

Our analytics already show where people ride. The Community Consultation Map adds what they need.

Residents drop a pin for a hazard, a missing crossing, poor lighting, a scary intersection, or a missing facility (parking, water, toilets, a bike path), then vote and comment on each other’s suggestions. The pins that matter most rise to the top.

For council staff, every consultation closes the loop:

  • A live, public map of what the community is flagging — by category and by votes.
  • One-click export of a consultation report (HTML, PDF, CSV or Excel) for committee papers and grant submissions.
  • Resident “missing facility” pins flow straight into the same infrastructure dataset as our automatic gap analysis — community voice and ride data, side by side.

It’s the bridge between hard ride data and lived experience, and a strong civic-tech angle for grants and local government.

📄 Corridor Prospectus — the case for a corridor, on one shareable page

Sometimes you don’t need a dashboard. You need a single page that answers “why does this corridor deserve activation?” — and a link you can send to a colleague, a councillor, or a funding body.

A Corridor Prospectus is auto-generated for a corridor and pulls together everything that makes the case:

  • Demand — aggregated ride activity along the corridor.
  • Existing bike paths and how much of the corridor is already covered.
  • Missing facilities and infrastructure gaps nearby.
  • Safety — crashes and swerves recorded on the route.
  • Weather exposure and proposed group rides in the area.

Each prospectus lives at its own shareable link, shows only aggregated data (never anyone’s individual ride trace), and exports to PDF for grant applications and council briefings. Staff choose exactly which corridors are published.

🧮 Pilot Proposal & ROI Simulator — from “interesting app” to “here’s my proposal”

The fastest way to lose momentum is to leave a champion without a number. The Pilot Proposal & ROI Simulator fixes that.

Pick an area, a number of riders, a duration and your goals, and it projects the outcomes a sponsor needs to sign off:

What you getExample output
Expected tripsTotal bike trips over the pilot
CO₂ avoidedKilograms saved from replaced car travel
Health & activity upliftEnergy expended by participants
Facility gapsReal gaps in the chosen area
Indicative pricingA ballpark to budget against

Every figure is grounded in the real demand and facility gaps for the area you picked — not generic averages — and you can download a pilot-scope proposal PDF to circulate internally. Want to start there? Model a pilot’s ROI now »

🔒 Built privacy-first

The whole suite is designed to be shareable because it never exposes anyone’s movements. Public pages show aggregated demand and open facility data only — individual ride traces never leave our analytics. Resident submissions are moderated, and your region’s data stays in your region.

Who it’s for

  • Councils & transport agencies — defend and fund cycleways with evidence, and run consultations that produce a report, not a shoebox of emails.
  • Employers — build the business case for a workplace cycling pilot before you launch.
  • Grant assessors & advocates — a shareable, data-backed prospectus for every corridor.
  • Community groups — turn local knowledge into votes, and votes into action.

Try it today

The Community Consultation Map and the ROI Simulator are live now. Explore what each tool can do for your city or organisation:

Better data leads to better infrastructure — and now it leads to artefacts you can actually circulate, fund, and act on.