[*BCM*] boston's bike sharing program
Hiroyuki Yamada
hyamada at MIT.EDU
Fri Aug 14 12:41:26 EDT 2009
The other thing to note (not sure if these details are available yet) is
location of the stands -- will there be ones out in the 'burbs, where
there actually useful for pre-post-train trips? e.g. davis, porter,
lechmere, etc. If they are only situated in the City of Boston (i.e. NOT
cambridge, somerville, brookline etc) then they will serve less purpose
-- once you're in the back bay or downtown there are T stops close
enough that you might not need to bike.
Something I can see them being useful for is biking TO the grocery store
(or other errands -- pharmacy, bank, etc), dropping the bike off while
you shop, and then biking back home, dropping the bike off a ~5-10 min
walk from home. Granted, most people don't want to carry a backpack able
to hold their groceries, but for small trips and such, it'd be nice to
not have to, again, spend more than 1/2 the time of the trip just
walking to or from their destination/bus stop/train station.
Pofitability might be an issue, especially at first -- are there any
provisions for the City to pad their early losses to allow the program
to settle in?
Also, as with Zipcar, are the rates past 30 min/each increment dastardly
high? I know people who've gotten zipcars back 2-5 minutes late, and had
to pay $50-75 as a result (some of these have been argued against and
won, but still..)
Overall sounds like a pretty good program though..
-Yuki
On 08/14/2009 12:26 PM, Ben Hunrichs wrote:
> I used the one while visiting Montreal in May, and it was pretty cool.
> The bike stands were everywhere, so without fore-thought, you could
> pretty easily jump on a bike, ride for less than 1/2 an hour, then leave
> it at another stand. They way they had it set up, you didn't need to
> buy a membership, you just swiped a credit card, and only got charged
> for anything if you kept the bike for more than 30 minutes. According
> to locals, you could serially ride multiple bikes for short hops, still
> at no charge.
>
> It is good for tourist use, but I think it also could be good for short
> pre/post subway trips. When I don't ride my own bike, I often take the
> T, and end up spending more than half of the commute time walking to and
> from the train. As far as I'm concerned it would be awesome to have a
> free or nearly free no-hassle bicycle waiting for me at either end.
>
> The bikes themselves were funcitonal, comfortable, but definitely not
> the kind of thing anyone would want to steal. (besides, they have your
> credit card number). The thing that worries me the most about this not
> working, is just the brutal, fuck-everyone vandalism impulse. People
> can be dicks.
>
> ben
> _______________________________________________
> Boston Critical Mass mailing list
> list at bostoncriticalmass.org
> http://bostoncriticalmass.org/list
> To unsubscribe email list-unsubscribe at bostoncriticalmass.org
>
More information about the Bostoncriticalmass
mailing list