Showing posts with label bikes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bikes. Show all posts

2 Aug 2014

The future of transport is Electric

(Taken from a press release and slightly amended to reflect being posted after the event, and Green involvement)

Penny Burgess and bike!
Gloucestershire's first electric cycle shop (E-cycle UK) opened it’s doors at 10 John Street Stroud on the 1st August 2014. It will be run by local cycle entrepreneur Jacob Kirby who also owns Tarmac and Trail in Stonehouse.

The shop will stock a wide range of electric bikes from utility bikes for getting to work on time to high spec touring machines and even full suspension  electric mountain bikes for adrenalin junkies  along  with a range of commuting cycling accessories.

Jacob said “ we have been selling an increasing number of electric bikes  from our shop in Stonehouse  but just didn’t have the space to display the whole range  to let customers see and try different makes and models to fit different budgets and requirements.”

He went on to add “ This is a great opportunity  to expand the business to meet an increasing demand for a cheap alternative to the car for short to medium journeys. We will of course be able to help customers reduce the purchase costs if they buy them through the national cycle to work scheme”   
Green Party Councillor and keen cyclist Simon Pickering said  “with increasing traffic congestion, the cost of insurance and rising fuel prices, more and more people are turning to cycling but around here the hills can be off putting.   I was a bit sceptical about electric bikes until I tried one, but  they are stunning, they are the future for local personal transport” 

Green Party member Penny Burgess who commutes around 20 miles a day  from Rodmarton  to work at Ecotricity in Stroud on an electric bike said  “my electric bike has changed my life, I can now commute  into Stroud without arriving hot or sweaty and  never get caught  in traffic jams on the edge of town. On the way home the electric bike just whizzes up the hill onto  Minchinhampton  common, it’s brilliant I would recommend them to anyone, whatever their fitness level. It also means we don’t need an extra car!”

Find out more about Penny Burgess's epic, fundraising cycle ride here - https://www.facebook.com/Pennydoesendtoend

8 Apr 2014

Access Bike!

This is a press release from Creative Sustainability, which we’re sharing because we think this work is really important. Cycling is good for health, independence, sustainability, and being able to engage socially. It’s about re-use, and opportunities for younger people, who have seen services aimed at them cut back to a shocking degree around the country.
Press release:
In 2012 Access Bike gave 50 young people around Stroud district a reconditioned bike, helmet and a lock for £20. With help from Creative Sustainability and bike shops Noah's and Cytek, Access Bike is doing it again in 2014.
Owning a bike means that young people can join in cycling related social, sport and community activities, giving them more independence to get to school and after school activities, increased social and recreational confidence and helping towards participation in activities such as cycling clubs and competitions. The project is focusing on young people who couldn't otherwise afford a bike and aims to work with Archway, Thomas Keble, Shrubberies, St. Rose's and Maidenhill Schools, plus The Door and Open House, to match bikes to young people who need one.
Elizabeth Bailey, aged 19 is the new project manager. She says "For some of these kids owning a bike would mean so much. It's easy to forget how, for many, a good bike is simply out of reach, particularly these days. I've always had a bike and it's given me the freedom to take part in things I could never have got to do without one." Elizabeth is working with the bike shops to find the right bikes for students and is looking for more bikes to be reconditioned.
Anna Bonallack, Director of Creative Sustainability says "I love this project, there is so much good that comes out of it for young people, including training for a group to become road safety and cycle maintenance trainers themselves so that they can do workshops with younger people. We also want to work with schools on a local cycling plan to help their students cycle safely to school -  let us know if you or your organisation can sponsor the project or lend expertise."
If you have a bike you don't use get in touch with Creative Sustainability. All bikes will be reconditioned by experts at Cytek, Tarmac and Trail and Noah's Ark, but the better nick they are in the more bikes they can get through. Call Elizabeth and Anna if you have a bike to donate and about the wider project -  01452 770177 or email anna@cscic.org 

For more information about Creative Sustainability CIC  visit our website www.cscic.org


CSCIC is a not for profit community interest company.

30 Dec 2013

Bikes Outsell Cars

Apparently, in 26 out of the 28 EU countries, bikes outsold cars in 2012. There’s an article about it here - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-25209551.

There are obvious economic reasons for what’s happening here. Cars are far more expensive to buy and run than bikes. With rising fuel costs and wide spread economic hardship, bikes are an obvious way of saving money. Why spend on a gym subscription when you can cycle to work and save money on both? For anyone interested in improving their health and fitness, swapping  a stressful short commute a bike ride is an obvious choice.

There are other practical reasons though. While cars sit in congestion, bikes can slip through, taking advantage of cycle paths and bike lanes, towpaths and other shortcuts. You don’t need to find a car sized space to leave your bike in, and usually you won’t pay to chain it up somewhere, either.

Cycling gives you a liberty that cars just can’t provide any more. The road is not a place of freedom or delight, and is often stressful, while the cycle path tends to be a quiet, enjoyable and safer space. Stroud has a lot of good cycle paths and the towpath, making cycling or walking a lot more fun than sitting in a queue.

Many people are turning to bikes for environmental reasons, too. Bikes do not create noise pollution or on-going air pollution. You don’t need to tarmac over vast expanses of countryside for cyclists. Bikes and pedestrians make for much friendlier urban spaces than an endless stream of cars do. On a bike, you get to be sociable. The personal advantages of both walking and cycling, are huge.

In London, Green Peer Jenny Jones is calling for 20mph speed limits to make roads safer for cyclists. https://www.london.gov.uk/media/assembly-member-press-releases/green-party/2013/12/news-from-jenny-jones-am-one-in-five-cyclists-have-abandoned We’re ahead here in Stroud, with 20mph limits in Randwick, Whiteshill and Ruscombe. Now plans are underway to get 20mph limits into more of Stroud – further information here. http://www.gloucestershire.gov.uk/extra/article/115270/Stroud-20mph-Speed-Limit-Proposal

It’s great that more people are cycling. However, for that to work, we have to support cyclists by making sure they are safe. Cyclists are really exposed compared to vehicle drivers, and recent tragic deaths in London demonstrate that it’s not enough to encourage people onto bikes. We need some political effort to make sure cycling is a safe, and therefore viable choice, right across the country.