Bicycling Makes Sense

Back in the 1990s I remember seeing a story on the evening news about a new bicycle recycling program for kids based in Manhattan. They were taught how to take apart bikes that were abandoned and to build new ones from the salvaged parts. I was too old to enter the program, but I thought it was a wonderful thing and am delighted that it's not only here today but has expanded to DUMBO, Brooklyn. In fact, today they even have a program for adults!


Recycle-A-Bicycle doesn't cater to cyclists training for the Tour-de-France or those anxious for a velodrome on the Columbia Street Waterfront. If you talk to Susan, the soft spoken shop manager there, she's more concerned about cultivating mutual respect between drivers and riders than pimping your ride with color-matched tires and frames. For Susan bicycling is liberating. She recommends ditching your car or not owning one in the first place and hopes that one day, we may consider bike paths in the same way we do sidewalks rather than as exclusive amenities.


Miguel "Crazy Legs", Head Mechanic
Susan, "Ace", Shop Manager

To Chris, who leads Recycle-A-Bicycle's volunteer night, "bicycling makes sense." Bicycles synthesize political and environmental concerns - the health benefits and lack of pollution make them ideal for knitting the gaps between subway stations and pedestrians and as  alternatives to cars. Recycling bicycles takes a lot of skill and the folks at Recycle-A-Bicycle are experts on bike maintenance and repair. Yet Chris empathizes with those who aren't so mechanically inclined (like me!). The mission is to demystify the bike; make them less trendy and more normal. If more Brooklynites ride bikes we may better appreciate how economical and convenient they are rather than as fashionably functional recreational vehicles.