Skip to main content

VIDEO: Cycle parking at the office is getting easier

Highway designers are increasingly asked to integrate cycle lanes and paths into their projects in major urban areas. And many commuting cyclists are grateful for it, too. But what happens when the cycle path ends, even if it is right outside the rider’s destination, such as his or her work place, be it an office building or factory? That last few metres are essential for completing the perfect commute. This means being able to park the bicycle in a secure environment.
September 7, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Highway designers are increasingly asked to integrate cycle lanes and paths into their projects in major urban areas.

And many commuting cyclists are grateful for it, too.

But what happens when the cycle path ends, even if it is right outside the rider’s destination, such as his or her work place, be it an office building or factory?

That last few metres are essential for completing the perfect commute. This means being able to park the bicycle in a secure environment.

Over the past decade or so, more and more businesses have been designing cycle parking on the premises, as well as installing shower and change-room facilities – even drying areas for a cyclists rain-soaked clothes.

But it’s been a struggle allowing cyclist to bring their two-wheels into the office if that is the only place to keep it safe. In some cities, such as New York, it’s mandatory for business’s and property owners to allow this.

New York City’s Bikes in Buildings programme is to aid the Bicycle Access to Office Buildings Law that aims to increase bicycle commuting by providing cyclists secure parking their bicycles in or close to their workplaces. The programme allows tenants of office buildings to request bicycle access for their employees. In response to a request, a building owner or manager must either grant access or request an exception from the New York City Department of Transportation.

The law, however, applies only to commercial office buildings with at least one freight elevator. It does not apply to residential buildings or any other building that is not primarily composed of offices.

There could also be a downside to encouraging cycle commuting. Some people just don’t know when to leave their bicycle outside, as the video below shows.

In London, one property owner has gone one wheel-turn further by designing in a cycle ramp right into the office, as this %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal BBC video Visit BBC Website false http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-34154520 false false%> shows. However, the cycle ramp at the refurbished Alphabeta building it may not be a ride for the faint-hearted.

Related Content

  • Anaconda shows off screener and conveyor
    February 26, 2013
    Anaconda Equipment International will have two products on display at its first bauma: the DF410 tracked screener and a TR60 18m track-mounted stockpiling conveyor. The DF410 entry level screener can screen and stockpile up to 250tonnes/hour of material into three sizes, and is said to be ideal for those restricted by working area in urban areas.
  • Chengyu makes tracks for worldwide market
    January 6, 2017
    Chinese undercarriage component manufacturer Chengyu Machinery Equipment has set its sights on increasing exports to world markets. The company makes track rollers, carrier rollers, idlers, sprockets and track chain assemblies for machines from two to 40tonnes and exports 60% of its output. It said its products are crack- and abrasion-resistant and with high quality control procedures – only 25 parts in a million fail its quality control. Both its product delivery and after-sales service levels are said to
  • Chengyu makes tracks for worldwide market
    April 22, 2013
    Chinese undercarriage component manufacturer Chengyu Machinery Equipment has set its sights on increasing exports to world markets. The company makes track rollers, carrier rollers, idlers, sprockets and track chain assemblies for machines from two to 40tonnes and exports 60% of its output. It said its products are crack- and abrasion-resistant and with high quality control procedures – only 25 parts in a million fail its quality control. Both its product delivery and after-sales service levels are said to
  • VIDEO: Rudolph gets a lift from a skilled excavator operator
    December 21, 2016
    Having trouble getting into that Christmas feeling? Too much taking and not enough giving in the world? Well, one extremely skilled excavator operator in the US did hit bit to change all that. He extended a helping hand – in reality a bucket - to a baby deer trapped head-deep in mud on an extremely wet construction site. The operator used his skills to gingerly lift the stricken animal to safety. That wasn’t the end of it. There were, in fact, two deer, and the excavator operator rescued the second