Valet Bike Parking: Difference between revisions

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# Tear off a pair of tickets.
# Tear off a pair of tickets.
# Give one raffle ticket to the bike owner.
# Give one raffle ticket to the bike owner.
# Wedge the other one inbetween the spokes.  When they come back to retrieve their bike make sure the numbers match.  If they have [[radial]] spokes, aerowheels, or spokes that don't touch (high end wheels and old schwinns) just tape it to the frame or wedge them somewhere else like a brake hood.
# Wedge the other one inbetween the spokes.  If they have [[radial]] spokes, aerowheels, or spokes that don't touch (high end wheels and old schwinns) just tape it to the frame or wedge them somewhere else like a brake hood.
# When they come back to retrieve their bike make sure the numbers match.


== Storing the Bikes ==
== Storing the Bikes ==

Revision as of 20:07, 11 February 2008

Valet Bike Parking is a great service to the community and advertising tool for community bike shops and advocacy organizations.

What is it?

Simply put, when attending an event instead of leaving your bike chaining up a post, you leave it with someone who is going to keep an eye on it. This not only ensures the safety of their bike, but it creates a centralized gathering point (aka social spot) for all the cyclists attending the event -- this encourages people to ride. The event itself benefits because to the decreased demand for car parking and the organization running the valet bike parking has great exposure to the local cycling population.

Liability

Chances are the people that would take the time to sue over a small scratch are not apt to use your service in the first place. Regardless, you should have insurance, and if the event has really high end bikes showing up, a waiver form never hurts.

Keeping track of bikes

Raffle Tickets

Raffle tickets are a cheap and easy way to do it. Buy a roll of 2,000 from Office Depot for under $8.

Instructions

  1. Tear off a pair of tickets.
  2. Give one raffle ticket to the bike owner.
  3. Wedge the other one inbetween the spokes. If they have radial spokes, aerowheels, or spokes that don't touch (high end wheels and old schwinns) just tape it to the frame or wedge them somewhere else like a brake hood.
  4. When they come back to retrieve their bike make sure the numbers match.

Storing the Bikes

Bottom Bracket Type Display Stands
  1. Build a tall saw horse and hang the bikes by their seats.
  2. Cycle-Safe has a professional version of a saw horse called the Bike-Check™ Portable Bicycle Parking System.
  3. Use Bottom Bracket Type Display Stands. NOTE: These will not work with over-sized down tubes.
  4. Assuming there is no risk of damaging lights or shifters, flip mountain bikes upside down. Doing so with older road bikes where brake housing comes out of the top of the brake hood may damage the cable, so just lean road bikes on their side. Due to the dangers of fixed gears and little fingers, it is not recommended that you flip these upside down either. Or best yet, they still have a kickstand! If you are parking bikes on grass, you might want to grab some small blocks of wood or crushed aluminum cans to put under the kickstands so the bikes don't fall over.

Valet Bike Parking Services

Recycle-A-Bike

They have done this for bike auctions and other fundraisers and public events.

Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective

Does this for downtown Salt Lake City events such as the Farmers' Market.

Chicago Bicycle Federation

They work with banks to pay for Valet Parking at many down town events through the summer, night time movie nights, food, cultural events, triathlons, and the end of family bike ride.

Simple snow fencing, for the outside barrier, three staff, metal racks for 500 bikes, and paper claim tickets for the patrons and their bikes, a repair stand if you want to get fancy.

San Francisco Bicycle Coalition

They do this all the time at major events.

Urban Bike Project of Wilmington

We have and will continue to do so. Big race in Wilmington last year, we parked about 200 bikes...It was a bit of a mess (most of these bikes parked in a half hour immediately following a bike parade) but our first time and plenty to be learned from the experience.