Population: 24,724
Population: 24,724
Situation: Emporia was a small town with an excess of dirt roads around the city.
Action: A small group of friends started racing several hundred miles on gravel roads.
Result: Bikers took note of this feat, and naturally, being competitive, started an all dirt road bike race that sustains the town.

Emporia, Kansas is a prime example of a city heavily capitalizing on the biking community and tourism. The surrounding Flint Hills offer miles of challenging gravel roads to ride on. The fact that you are surrounded by one of the rarest ecosystems in all of North America – tall native prairie – does not hurt things either.

Now called Unbound Gravel and presented by Shimano, the event started as the Dirty Kanza in 2006 under founders Jim Cummins and Joel Dyke with 34 participants. By 2019 it had grown to around 3,400 riders. The 2026 edition runs five distances (25, 50, 100, 200, and 350 miles) over four days from May 28-31, drawing close to 5,000 riders from more than 50 countries. For a city of 24,000 that is not a small number.
The great thing about becoming a biking town is that it draws people year round – not just for races but for destination riding. The Flint Hills gravel network is the draw; the town is the base.

People come from all over the country to attend these events. It is not just money circulated through the town but out-of-town money from nearby big cities like Kansas City.
Niche Bicycle Businesses
Just like some of these amazing small towns, like Leavenworth, Washington, businesses tuned to your market niche begin appearing. For example, there are several bike shops in town, specialty biking campgrounds, and dedicated gravel-oriented food stops.
Ancillary Businesses
Then of course you have the general ancillary businesses like hotels, diners, and gas stations. Everyone needs those staples. Emporia’s lodging supply includes a Hampton Inn, Fairfield by Marriott, and Holiday Inn Express – adequate for ordinary weekends and stretched to the limit during Unbound Gravel week.
New Life into Old Attractions
Big biking events like this also help support other local attractions. If well advertised, people from out of town are inclined to visit local sites. The William Allen White House, for example – a Gilded Age mansion of a famous Kansas writer and editor – benefits from the foot traffic gravel week brings to town.
How to Capitalize Further
Emporia continues to grow into the needs of the gravel community. A hostel would give younger riders a place to congregate, meet new people, and make memories. Great memories are what keep people coming back. A permanent community plaza with outdoor seating, food truck provisions, and a casual post-ride gathering space would extend daily dwell time beyond the race calendar.