SF Bay Area’s Bike Share Set For Expansion

Bay Area Bike Share is poised for a tenfold expansion in the region.

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Bay Area Bike Share’s proposed expansion to more than 7,000 bicycles was approved last month.

The expansion to more than 7,000 bicycles, set to be completed by 2017, would introduce the popular program in the East Bay for the first time and come at no cost to taxpayers, according to the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, which approved the increase last month.

Bike sharing, a subscription service where bikes are available at docking stations for short rides, was first introduced in the Bay Area in 2013 with 700 bikes at 70 docking stations in San Francisco, Redwood City, Palo Alto, Mountain View and San Jose.

The program has been successful, particularly in San Francisco, and an expansion has been planned since shortly after its inception. However, planned expansions were stalled when bicycle manufacturer Bixi went bankrupt last year.

But the company that operates the system has since reorganized its supply chain and is ready to expand it significantly over the next two years.

Now called Motivate International Inc., the company operates similar systems in Chicago; New York; Washington, D.C.; Seattle; and other cities in the U.S. and Canada. The company said it can expand the program at no cost to taxpayers by funding it through corporate sponsorship, a model that has been successful in other urban areas.

Motivate CEO Jay Walder said Wednesday at the MTC that bike share bicycles are used in numerous different ways, including connecting to BART, Muni or Caltrain, taking rides between neighborhoods not well connected by public transit, running quick errands or just to get some exercise.

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“That’s the beauty of bike share: Each person can make it what they want it to be,” Walder said. “In the blink of an eye it will become part of the urban fabric of the cities.”

Most of the new bikes would go to San Francisco, where the total number of bikes would jump to 4,500. After the expansion, there would be 1,000 bikes in San Jose, 850 in Oakland, 400 in Berkeley and 100 in Emeryville.

Mountain View, Palo Alto and Redwood City could get up to 155 bikes between the three cities, though bike sharing has not proven to be particularly popular there and the cities may decide to abandon it altogether, MTC officials said.

 

This article is adapted from San Francisco Examiner.



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