![]() LEGO has been selling kits based on skyscrapers for almost ten years, and I have a few, for buildings where I’ve done races. This map is one way I celebrate my stair racing accomplishments, and another is through LEGO. And while I have upcoming races on the calendar that’ll bump my total count higher, none of the next few are in new cities. That’s 43 races total! Recaps for all of them here. 1 race: Phoenix, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Springfield, Minneapolis, New York City, Oxnard.2 races: Las Vegas, Portland, San Francisco, Culver City.The map doesn’t include info on how frequently I’ve raced in each location, but I’ve broken it down here: In addition to LA, I’ve raced in Anaheim, Culver City, and Oxnard, so those count, even though I consider them local, since none are more than about an hour away. I had lumped all the Los Angeles-area races together on the first version under “Los Angeles,” and this time around I separated them. ![]() I’ve competed in new cities – Denver, Minneapolis, and Springfield – so clearly those got added to the map.My 5-minute presentation, called How to Race Up The Stairs in the World’s Tallest Skyscrapers, is available on YouTube and you should totally check it out! (Full confession: I traced the USA outline.) I drew the first version two years ago, to include in a slideshow presentation I did at the Fitbloggin’ conference in Denver. This is the version 2.0 of this map, which is hand-drawn. SEVENTEEN! I think that warrants a new stair race map, don’t you think? Check it out! I realized the other day that I’ve now done a stair race in 17 different cities.
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