Unfortunately, no, or at least not yet. (With the exception of the once-ayear 5-Borough bike tour in NYC, the last leg of which features a ride over the VZ bridge from Brooklyn to Staten Island)
The bridge was originally designed with a pedestrian/bike pathway , but the the legendary NYC infrastructure czar and evil genius Robert Moses put the kibosh on it.
There are various proposals to add a pedestrian/bike pathway, and in 1997 a feasibility study was commissioned but as of of now October, 2009 it seems that it's a long way away from being implemented. Maybe before I turn 70 (I'm 39 now) I'll one day commute across the VZ.
Here's a website containing info regarding the proposals:
http://home.earthlink.net/~sfaust1534/
http://home.earthlink.net/~sfaust1534/cityplan1997/VNB%20DCP%20Ped-Bike%20Path%20FINAL%20Rpt%20Dec%201997.pdf
walk on it,ride your bike on it,or walk on the north side of the bridge, which is the side where pedestriands can walk.
It cannot be done. To ride a bike around the earth, the continents would need to be connected, or the bike would need a really long bridge across the ocean.
It doesn't. If you are referring to London Bridge in London, it is mostly used by commuters.
Ride the Acro Bike and do bike jumps to cross over the white things.
You first need an Acro bike, then you go to the bridge and ride your Acro bike across until there is the bars on their own. you when press Up on the control pad and 'A' at the same time and your bike will hop. Continue hoping until you reached the end bar and drive across. Please comment if t his works (because it should!) The Black Prince actually you press B not A .
No, it is illegal to ride a dirt bike on the street but you can ride it on a trail or dirt bike track.
Get a bike and ride it
You ride a bike because it has to be balanced by the operator.
It depends on how fast you can ride a bike!
i keep the bike on tand and ride on it , then handle is no bar
depends where you live and how big it it : I live in Las Vegas Nv and have a 110 cc super pocket bike and i ride it all over w no problems
A bike is a bike is a bike, can you ride one you can ride them all - after a fashion. MTBs in particular are rather easy to handle as the riding position is fairly upright. In terms of difficulties of merely riding down the road I'd say that a road bike for the same given size is more difficult to ride as it will have the rider more stretched out and hunched over, but it's not like that is hugely challenging either. The hardest bikes to ride are probably the recumbents, particularly the ones with waist steering. Those tends to take some getting used to.