A look inside Hamilton's surprising bike share success story
Nearly a year after the first Sobi Hamilton bikes were rolled out, the system has caught on
A couple of weeks ago, Owen Anderson, 54, went for a 27-kilometre bike ride on a bike he doesn't own.
Monumental trips like thathelpexplain how Anderson, who does magic shows for kids for a living, isHamilton's bike share top user.
As of Sunday,he'dridden2154.88 kilometres on the SOBIbike share bikes. He joined in May, so that's about 300 km a month, roughly 10 km a day.
Sometimes he goes further, like that 27-km rideon the Rail Trail out to Highway 54 and back.
Unlike the majority of riders who use the bikes for commutes and errands, Anderson uses it entirely for recreation and exercise.
Anderson is top user among 7,300 registered riders who have madebike system an unqualified and to some, a surprisingsuccess in the city.
The sightof the distinctive bikes on city streets hasbecome commonplace around town in less than a year of operation. Even its organizers and a city transport planner admitthey hoped, but couldn't say for sure, the system would go as well as it has.
"We've been really pleased at how well-received it's been," said Chelsea Cox, SOBI'scommunity manager.
- Read More:Over 40 SoBi riders tour north Hamilton in group ride
-
Read More:'Ghost bike' march calls for safer streets after cyclist killed
The biggest group of people to helpthe system achieve its success are those who wouldn't previously have called themselves cyclists.
Some are seniors, some have chronic health issues, some are people who love to walk but find the bikes help them shave 10 minutes off here and there.
Now, the people running the system are looking for ways to grow that success even bigger.
Sobi by the numbers
Before Hamilton's bike sharerolled the first bright blue and yellow bikes into hubs around town last January, the whole idea attracted a not-insignificant level of naysaying.
Some of the arguments:The system, delayed by several months,would never catch on. It cost too much ($1.6 million of provincial money earmarked by the city). The only people who'd use it would be bearded hipsters on James Street who have their own bikes, anyway.
But now, nearly a year into it, Sobi Hamilton has caught on in a big way:
Riders: The system has7,300 active users, 1,200 of whom are members who pay a monthly subscription.They weren't previously "cyclists" morethan 60 per cent of riders say before Sobi, they rode a bike once a month or less.
Distance: Sobicovers a 40-kilometre area from Westdale to Ottawa Street to the escarpment in the south.
Bikes: There are 750 bikes and 115 hubs that riders have used to bike close to 400,000 km total in less than a year.
Ride length:Rides are an average of 19 minutes and 2.16 km.
Gender:Sobistaff are perhaps proudest of stats showing the riders break down evenly between men and women, which they say is uncommon in other bike shares.
The system is so popular even the people who run it, who have fancy, trustybikes of their own, find themselves using it all the time.
"Once you start using it you just realize it's there," said Cox.
We've kind of assumed that everyone who wants to ride a bike has that opportunity, but it wasn't true.- Sara Mayo, Social Planning and Research Council
The city used $1.6 million inprovincial money to buy the bikes and get the program running, but now it runs on sponsorships and subscriptions.A $25,000 grant from Union gasthis year kickedoff a subsidized-membership initiative, which distributed 250 memberships to people who might not otherwise have afforded it.
One challenge facing the program: The need for more bikes and hubs to make it as convenient across the whole service area as it is in the city's western neighbourhoods. The ideal distance a rider would have to walk to get to a hub is less than 500 metres, and that ratio is larger in Central Hamilton.
That's why city staff want to add a handful of new hubs and between 75 and 125 new bikes east of Wentworth Street.
Changing behaviour
A popular place to start is a protected trail likeBayfront Park.
People who haven't ridden for years drive or walk there, take out a bike and give it a spin.
"Bike share has been hugely important.It's renewed a lot of people's love affair with the bike that they might have had as a kidbut didn't bike for many years," said Sara Mayo, who researches Hamilton cycling for the Social Planning and ResearchCouncil.
"It's amazing that we've kind of assumed that everyone who wants to ride a bike has that opportunity, but it wasn't true," Mayo said.
The program's eastern expansion from its initial Gage Park boundary has made that possible, Richardson said.
From downtown, it's a20-minute bus ride home once shegets on the bus, she said. "But Ican ride a bike to the hub in 12 minutes."
A game of convenience
Cycling in general is well-suited for atrip that's too far to walk but too close to drive. But Sobi changes that equation.
"The difference, really, is that you can make a one-way trip," said PeterTopolovic, who works in the city's transportation department. "That turns out to be a lot more people than you think."
Anderson, the marathon rider,pays for a monthly membership, which gives him an hour of use per day. He sees the constraint asa game to see how far he can get in the hour.
Like Richardson, he walks out of his way to returnbikes that were locked out of the hubs to hubs, collecting credits towards days he does go over the hour limit.
He's almost collected enough to pay for his next year's membership, which costs $85.
He never expected he'd be the highest user, he said.
"I just decided to trySobiand it worked out OK," he said. "It looked kind of cool."
@kellyrbennett @SoBiHamilton missed bus to @McMasterU convocation ceremony, took a sobi to get there, just made it pic.twitter.com/OX9ppZ8Pcm
—@CoreyHMasters