Most Popular
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Ultrarunning Gets Younger and Faster
Tony Krupicka takes his sport to new extremes.
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Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
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GB Fish & Chips
If at first you dont succeed, fry, fry again.
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Encore Restaurant
Recycling is good for the planet and it can taste good, too.
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Rent-a-Cop
Denver's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
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Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game (6)
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
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Vonnegut (5)
Fall Into Place
Self-released -
CU's Campus Press Fights for Independence (3)
A contentious faculty meeting points to independence for CU-Boulder's student newspaper — but at what cost?
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Shakeup in Denver Radio (4)
Denver radio's getting a shakeup, with more alterations on the horizon. But do any of the switches qualify as improvements?
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Deconstructing the DNA of a Denver Post Pulitzer Finalist (3)
Critics raise questions regarding an impressive Post series shortly after it's named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
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Ultrarunning Gets Younger and Faster
Tony Krupicka takes his sport to new extremes.
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Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
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Rent-a-Cop
Denver's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
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News Corp Dumps Local Fox Affiliates
Two local Fox affiliates recently dumped by Rupert Murdoch are now enjoying their greatest success to date.
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Deconstructing the DNA of a Denver Post Pulitzer Finalist
Critics raise questions regarding an impressive Post series shortly after it's named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
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Denver Crack Dancers Get Down
04:26PM 04/29/08 -
Monolith Line Up Announced
10:00AM 04/29/08 -
Lots of Lux
04:18PM 04/29/08 -
Fashion Moto 2008
11:15AM 04/28/08 -
Carded: Supreme Court OKs Voter Photo ID
09:56AM 04/29/08
What we are writing about
- Barack Obama
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- Colorado Rockies
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- Jason Sheehan
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- My Kid Could Paint That
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Recent Articles By Joel Warner
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Wheels of Fortune
Steve Meyer wants to sell pedicabs to the world — but is the world willing to go along for the ride?
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Free and Easy
Tim Blumenthal hopes Bikes Belong at the DNC.
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Gee Whiz
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Snowboard Style
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The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, it messed with the wrong coward.
National Features
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The Pitch
Time Bomb in a Bottle
"The idea that you're using sex hormones to make plastic is just totally insane."
By Nadia Pflaum -
Houston Press
Foreclosure Pets
When homeowners are pushed out, animals get left behind.
By Paul Knight -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
On Your Honor
A judge's alleged relationships with defense lawyers and prosecutors raise eyebrows.
By Bob Norman -
Village Voice
A Soldier's Story
Remembering the day a black mob lynched a white man.
By Tony Ortega
Joe Polara and his four-year-old son, Luka, cruise through northwest Denver, past the Victorians topped with solar panels, the dogs yipping through the fence posts and the old men poking at their lawns — many of whom gape at Polara's shiny black pedicab.
"It's definitely a good conversation-starter," Polara says. When people ask how he ended up with this enormous tricycle, he tells them that he and his wife were looking for an adult-sized version of the child trailer people attach to the back of their bikes; she was pregnant with Luka's younger sibling at the time, and they wanted something that Polara could haul the entire family in. He realized what he needed was a rickshaw, and it just so happened that the largest rickshaw/pedicab manufacturer in the nation was Main Street Pedicabs in Broomfield. "We test-drove one and fell in love with it," he says.
Now he takes it out every week, weather permitting, to run errands, buy groceries or pick up a bottle of wine from the corner store. Other times, he chauffeurs neighborhood kids, who never tire of the apparatus. And it's great for events like street fairs, since he never has to worry about parking.
"I've never ridden it for money," says Polara, clad in a winter hat and gloves to stave off the wind sheer. "But it's fun driving the family around." Luka, lounging contentedly beneath a pile of blankets in the cab, seems to agree.
Polara says he'd use it to commute to his job downtown if the return trip wasn't such an uphill slog, but he does get good exercise. Gears clacking, he huffs his way up a moderate hill. "You'll get a workout that way!" hollers a man in his back yard. "I need it!" Polara responds between pants. The commotion of Federal Boulevard greets Polara at the top of the rise, and for one brief, exhilarating moment, he launches his vehicle into the street, pedaling furiously into oncoming traffic before swinging into the pedestrian cut-through in the central median. Buried up to his nose in blankets, it's hard to know if Luka is scared or exhilarated.
A man watching the feat on the other side gives the pedicab a thumbs-up. "Get on!" cries Polara — but the man declines. "You learn a lot about people by whether they'll get on," says Polara, pedaling into Rocky Mountain Lake Park and coasting around the pathway there. "I used to ride those in Korea," exclaims an old man sitting on a bench. Next to him, an elderly woman smiles mischievously. "Can you take me to the old Villa Italia area?" she asks, referring to a spot on Alameda Avenue in Lakewood that's six miles away. "That will take all day," Polara replies with a laugh, and pumps on.
Although he's heard they exist, he's never seen anyone else with a personal pedicab — which is a shame, he adds, since he believes people are missing out on a great option: "I'd love to see more people riding these instead of cars."
Luka finally speaks up: "Dad, I want to play on the playground." They pull over by a swingset and leave the pedicab unattended. "Nobody messes with it," Polara says. "The idea of jumping on it and riding away on it doesn't occur to people."











