Possible Competition for Bay Area Bike Share

With Bay Area Bike Share serving nearby Redwood City in San Mateo County, it might seem odd that the city of San Mateo would look elsewhere for starting a bike share program. However, the city of almost 103,000 did not want a "hub-based" model.

2 minute read

November 28, 2015, 1:00 PM PST

By Irvin Dawid


"On November 16, the city council approved a 50-bike, 3-year test pilot bike sharing program where riders can leave their bikes outside designated stations, also known as hubs," writes 

A rendering of a bicycle from San Mateo's pilot bike-sharing program, which is scheduled to launch in May 2016.

We think that model works much better in suburban environments where you can't always guess where people are coming and going from," said Kathy Kleinbaum, San Mateo's sustainability program manager. Kleinbaum said the pilot program would be launched in May 2016.

Of course, the 50-bike San Mateo Bike Share represents no threat to the 700, soon-to-be 7,000-bike regional Bay Area Bike Share program that launched in five cities in August last year and is expanding in San Francisco and San Jose and to the East Bay cities of Oakland, Berkeley and Emeryville next year.

Kleinbaum said the city is modeling its program after Santa Monica's bike share program, and hopes to offset some of the expenses from user fees as well as company sponsors.

"Santa Monica's bikes will be equipped with GPS tracking and a fare card scanner, allowing patrons to leave (and pick up) their ride at just about any bike rack rather than specially-designated ones," writes Philip Rojc, contributing editor at Planetizen after the November 12 launch. "They'll pay an extra two dollars for the privilege." [San Mateo has devised its own fee schedule.]

Rather than competition, the San Mateo program complements the regional program which may not be well-adapted to the less dense, more auto-oriented cities of the San Francisco peninsula, as evidenced by the existing programs in Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Redwood City which were in jeopardy of being dropped from the regional program due to low patronage.

An email from Sigalle Michael, sustainability coordinator of Burlingame, a city of almost 30,000 on the northern border of San Mateo, indicated that she will be "tracking their progress." She added, "I see potential opportunities for a future expansion to Burlingame…"

"Bikes will be purchased for $1,500 apiece from Brooklyn-based Social Bicycles Inc., and operations will be done by Bikes Make Life Better, which runs bike share programs on corporate campuses for Facebook, Apple and others," adds Druzin.

Hat tip: Jeff Londer, Citizens Environmental Council of Burlingame.

Monday, November 23, 2015 in Silicon Valley Business Journal

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