Some Firefox users may need to log in more than once to log in. It's a known Firefox bug. Check "keep me logged in," it might help.

Es posible que algunxs usuarixs de Firefox tengan que conectarse más de una vez para iniciar sesión. Es un error conocido de Firefox. Marca "keep me logged in" (mantenerme conectado), puede ayudar.


Bike Edmonton: Difference between revisions

From Bike Collectives Wiki
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{{
{{
   shop-info
   shop-info
   | name          = Edmonton Bicycle Commuters' Society
   | name          = Bike Edmonton
   | logo          = EBClogo.gif
   | logo          = BEPrimary_Cartouche_Full_Colour.png
   | year_founded  = 1980
   | year_founded  = 1980
   <!-- Leave this next field empty if the organization is still in operation -->
   <!-- Leave this next field empty if the organization is still in operation -->
   | year_dissolved =  
   | year_dissolved =  


   | website  = http://www.edmontonbikes.ca
   | website  = https://bikeedmonton.ca
  | email    = info@bikeedmonton.ca  
   | town    = Edmonton
   | town    = Edmonton
   | state    =  
   | state    =  
Line 30: Line 32:
   | has-workshops          = yes
   | has-workshops          = yes
   | has-courses            = yes
   | has-courses            = yes
   | has-group-rides        = no
   | has-group-rides        = yes
   | has-bicycle-advocacy  = no
   | has-bicycle-advocacy  = yes
   | has-pedicab            = no
   | has-pedicab            = no
   | has-in-school-programs = no
   | has-in-school-programs = yes
   | has-youth-summercamp  = no
   | has-youth-summercamp  = no
   | has-youth-racing      = no
   | has-youth-racing      = no
Line 39: Line 41:


   <!-- Please share your mission statement or mandate -->
   <!-- Please share your mission statement or mandate -->
   | mission-statement = To make every day cycling in Edmonton safer and more widespread by providing bicycle services, resources, education and advocacy. We promote the bicycle as a healthy, economical and ecologically sound mode of travel.
   | mission-statement = We work to make cycling accessible for everyone, because we believe that an Edmonton where anyone can choose to cycle is an Edmonton that’s better for all.


}}
}}
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<!--  Tell us a little bit about your shop here    -->
<!--  Tell us a little bit about your shop here    -->
The '''[http://www.edmontonbikes.ca/ {{PAGENAME}}]''' has been a leader in the Edmonton and area environmental and cycling community since 1980. Our goal is to support the bicycle as a healthy and ecologically sound mode of everyday urban travel.  
Learn how to fix your bike and explore the city by bike. Buy a refurbished bike, or donate a disused one. Meet other cyclists, and help us advocate for a vibrant city.
 
Whether you ride once a week, 265 bike-friendly days a year, or year-round, Bike Edmonton gives you the tools you need to enjoy cycling. Established as the non-profit Edmonton Bicycle Commuters Society in 1980 and now called Bike Edmonton, we operate two volunteer-run community bike workshops, provide cycling education for people of all ages, host events with community partners year-round, and represent you at City Hall.


== Contact Info ==
== Contact Info ==
<!--  Mailing addres, or email or both    -->
<!--  Mailing addres, or email or both    -->
===Mail===
===Mail===
Edmonton Bicycle Commuters' Society
Bike Edmonton
 
Box 1819 Station Main
Box 1819 Station Main
Edmonton AB  T5J 2P2
Edmonton AB  T5J 2P2


===e-Mail===
===E-mail===
info@edmontonbikes.ca
info@bikeedmonton.ca


===In Person===
===Location===
South Edmonton:
10047 80 Ave NW (Back Alley)
Edmonton AB  T6E 1T4


North Edmonton (opening April 2012):
'''Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop'''
9305 111 Ave NW
Edmonton AB  T5G 0A2


===Phone===
8001 102 St
* South location: 780-433-BIKE (2453)
* North location: (not yet available)


=== Website ===
Edmonton AB
* http://www.edmontonbikes.ca/
* http://www.cycleedmonton.ca/ (advocacy)


== History ==
T6E 4A2
In 1980, a group of like-minded, bicycle-commuting enthusiasts decided it was time to band together to encourage and help more people to get around Edmonton by bicycle. On August 1 of that year, the Edmonton Bicycle Commuters’ Society was officially born!


The original idea was to provide a do-it-yourself bike shop and bike recycling service to commuter cyclists in Edmonton. The EBC community bike shop, '''Bikeworks''', is still the heart of EBC, but the organization has done much, much more over the last thirty years.
780-433-BIKE (2453)


In the early 1990s, EBC launched a festival to celebrate the wondrous machine that is the bicycle! '''Lunar Cycle,''' which ran for six years before the main organizers moved on to bigger and better things, was a celebration of all things bikey, and included events such as bike-to-work breakfasts, participation in the silly summer parade (with our lovely cow-on-a-bike mascot), advocacy outreach, a critical mass ride and many other events.
'''Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop'''


Since 2001, Lunar Cycle has been reincarnated and expanded by EBC members and others in the community in the annual June Bike Month celebrations, centred around the weekend-long [http://www.bikeology.ca/ Bikeology festival].
10612 105 Ave


The '''Rails to Trails''' initiative was also developed in the 1990s by a core group of EBC members. The vision of Rails to Trails was to convert unused rail corridors in the city into a network of multi-use trails for cyclists and pedestrians. While not as expansive as envisioned, What EBC advocated for has essentially been adopted by the City of Edmonton’s Ribbon of Steel project. Although our participation is obscured in the past, WE know that the kernel of the idea began with us and was championed by others.
Edmonton AB


The '''Bikes on Buses''' initiative - to encourage the city to equip Edmonton Transit buses with racks for bicycles - was started by former EBC president Tooker Gomberg, one of our more active (and infamous) members, who was by that time, on City Council. It continued when the Edmonton Transit System called up and asked if we would consider funding - via a grant - racks for other routes, which EBC successfully accepted. The program has been operating since 1996 within the City of Edmonton.  The current City of Edmonton Active Transportation plan calls for bike racks to eventually be available on all buses.
T5H 0L2


Since its inception, EBC has been committed to reducing the environmental impact of bicycles past their prime. We continue to accept used bikes and strip them of parts that can still be used to stock our low-cost parts room. Unsalvageable parts and bikes are sent to be melted down and recycled. In 2006, EBC expanded our recycling program by partnering with the Alberta Recycling Management Authority, Mountain Equipment Coop, and a number of bike stores in Edmonton to pilot a project to collect and recycle bicycle tires.
780-433-BIKE (2453)


The many changes in the location of BikeWorks are also renowned among longstanding members. We started out on Jasper Avenue before moving to 105 Street and 85 Avenue, and then to someone’s car! The next actual building was the Quonset hut between Calgary Trail North and South at University Avenue. BikeWorks next location was a space over at the Tile factory in the same yard. That winter was a particularly cold one for intrepid BikeWorks mechanics, as there was no heat in the Tile Factory. Walter Gobel donated a wood burning stove, and we stayed warm by burning extraneous bits of paper.
== Transit ==
'''Nearby bus stops to Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop are:'''


We experienced some difficulty with vandals, so, when our landlord, the Alberta Government, sold the property to NAIT the following winter, many welcomed the move to our new location. In 2000 we moved EBC into our present home - a much-needed larger, more visible space which has allowed us to expand the services we offer to the community and improve our revenues by carrying more inventory and being in a more accessible space.  In 2012, EBC returned to the North side, leasing a warehouse at 111 Ave and 93 St.  This represented the first time we had operated two locations simultaneously.
* 2723 (westbound on Whyte Ave) and 2864 (eastbound) [Routes 4, 7, and 94].


It’s been a long ride for EBC, marked by chaos; rusty clunkers; insolvency and solvency; some new, shiny parts; constant moves; enthusiasm; thousands of used bikes coming and going; amazing volunteers; happy staff; beautiful, sane members; lots of learning; bent tools; crazy people pretending to be sane, then insisting that bikes be made available to them to cycle to Ontario in October; building mezzanines and taking mezzanines down; pizza; bikes and wheels swinging from the rafters and piling thick on the floor; bitter staff; relentless staff; bike movies; lunar cycling; overflowing storage rooms; great conversations over broken bikes; art bikes; staying warm by the light of the wood burning stove; donations from other bike shops; bikes stolen; and on and on and on. For over 30 years, EBC has been proud to promote commuter cycling and sustainable energy technology.


Non-profit groups are generally run by the seat of their pants and the kindness of strangers, and EBC is no exception; there was a time when being the president of EBC meant paying the organization’s rent. But through it all and thanks to our committed members and many volunteers (to say nothing of the various funders we’ve had over the years, including CanadaTrust Environment Fund, EcoTrust, the Wild Rose Foundation and numerous casinos), we have prevailed to become the group we are today: a slightly obscure, hardworking fringe element teaching and assisting people in their choice to commute by bicycle.
'''Nearby bus stops to Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop are:'''


== Services Offered ==
* MacEwan LRT Station
=== BikeWorks DIY Shop ===
* 11301 (eastbound on 105 Ave) [Route 7]
* 1605 (northbound on 109 St) [Routes 7, 8, 15]
* 1557 (southbound on 109 St) [Routes 8, 15]
* 1989 (westbound on 104 Ave) [Routes 2, 7, 8, 15, 111, 112, 560]
* 1824 (eastbound on 104 Ave) [Routes 2, 8, 15, 111, 112, 201, 208]


EBC operates BikeWorks, a fully equipped, volunteer-run community bicycle shop. We have general purpose tools and many of the specialty bicycle tools you need to repair and maintain your two-wheeler.
=== Website ===
* https://bikeedmonton.ca/
* Find us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/BikeEdmonton
* Twitter [https://twitter.com/bikeedmonton @bikeedmonton]


With help and guidance from our trusty volunteer mechanics, anyone (even those without any mechanical experience) can do their own repairs and perform their own maintenance.
== History ==
https://bikeedmonton.ca/history/


BikeWorks also carries a large stock of used parts so you can replace defective components at a very reasonable cost.
== Services Offered ==
=== Community Bicycle Workshops ===


The BikeWorks Guide is a comprehensive guide to the operation of BikeWorks:
Bike Edmonton Downtown and Bike Edmonton South are fully-equipped, volunteer-run community bike workshops. We have all the tools (including specialty bicycle tools) needed to repair and maintain your bicycle, and mechanics to teach you how to do it. We also have a vast selection of used and new parts and bicycles available for purchase.
[[Media:BikeWorks_Guide.pdf‎]]


=== Recycling ===
=== Recycling ===


EBC's mandate includes recycling. We accept donations of bicycles and parts, and will refurbish, reuse, and recycle them. We recycle metal as well as rubber (tubes and tires).
Bike Edmonton's mandate includes recycling. We accept donations of bicycles and parts, and will refurbish, reuse, and recycle them. We recycle metal as well as rubber (tubes and tires).


=== Cycling education ===
=== Cycling education ===
Line 117: Line 121:
We offer courses for adults to learn to ride, children with special needs to learn to ride, as well courses on on-road cycling for cyclists of all ages and skill levels (emphasizing riding safely and effectively).  We also offer basic mechanic courses, specialized courses (e.g. wheel building), mechanic training courses (to become a mechanic), and topical courses (e.g. introduction to winter riding).
We offer courses for adults to learn to ride, children with special needs to learn to ride, as well courses on on-road cycling for cyclists of all ages and skill levels (emphasizing riding safely and effectively).  We also offer basic mechanic courses, specialized courses (e.g. wheel building), mechanic training courses (to become a mechanic), and topical courses (e.g. introduction to winter riding).


[http://www.canbike.net/cca_pages/index.htm CAN-BIKE] courses are offered through EBC. The Canadian Cycling Association's CAN-BIKE program are courses oriented toward recreational and utilitarian cycling, focused on cycling safely and enjoyably on the road. The CAN-BIKE cycling safety program provides a nationally standardized set of courses that can be taught through a variety of organizations who are interested in education, safety and health.
[http://www.cyclingcanada.ca/resources/can-bike/ CAN-BIKE] courses are offered through Bike Edmonton. The Canadian Cycling Association's CAN-BIKE program are courses oriented toward recreational and utilitarian cycling, focused on cycling safely and enjoyably on the road. The CAN-BIKE cycling safety program provides a nationally standardized set of courses that can be taught through a variety of organizations who are interested in education, safety and health.


CAN-BIKE Instructors are nationally certified highly skilled cyclists and instructors.
CAN-BIKE Instructors are nationally certified highly skilled cyclists and instructors.
Line 125: Line 129:
[http://www.ghostbikes.org/ Ghost Bikes] are small and somber memorials for bicyclists who are killed or hit on the street. A bicycle is painted all white and locked to a street sign near the crash site, accompanied by a small plaque. They serve as reminders of the tragedy that took place on an otherwise anonymous street corner, and as quiet statements in support of cyclists' right to safe travel.
[http://www.ghostbikes.org/ Ghost Bikes] are small and somber memorials for bicyclists who are killed or hit on the street. A bicycle is painted all white and locked to a street sign near the crash site, accompanied by a small plaque. They serve as reminders of the tragedy that took place on an otherwise anonymous street corner, and as quiet statements in support of cyclists' right to safe travel.


EBC sets up ghost bike memorials around the city as tributes to individuals, and reminders to all cyclists and drivers.
Bike Edmonton sets up ghost bike memorials around the city as tributes to individuals, and reminders to all cyclists and drivers.
 
=== The Spoke - Youth Earn-a-Bike Program ===
We offer a youth earn-a-bike program called [https://bikeedmonton.ca/the-spoke The Spoke].


=== Women and Transgendered ===
=== Women, Transgender, and Gender Non-binary Program ===


We have regular days where the shop is only open to women and transgendered persons.
We offer [https://bikeedmonton.ca/women-transgender-non-binary-program WTGNB] programming.


=== Other services ===
=== Other services ===
For a full list of services, please visit [https://bikeedmonton.ca/]


* Low-cost bicycles (typically between $30-100)
Some examples include:
* Trailer rental
* Low-cost bicycles (typically between $40-120)
* Bike cargo trailer rental
* Bicycle rental
* Bicycle rental
* Secure bicycle parking at events around the city
* Secure bicycle parking at events around the city
* Advocacy for cyclists
* Advocacy for cyclists
* [http://www.edmonton.ca/transportation/bikes-on-ets-buses2564.aspx Bikes on Buses]
* Education
* [http://www.bikeology.ca Bicycle events] (June is Bike Month, commuter race, bike-to-work breakfasts)
 
* [http://www.edmontonbikes.ca/brb Bike Route Blockers]
 
* [http://edmontonbikes.ca/stolenbikes Stolen Bikes in Edmonton]
=== Resources for replication and distribution ===
 
All dollar amounts are in CAD unless explicitly stated otherwise.
 
[https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1jhVNQwLBH2jBQ7dGya0SSokXyxr-xbnK?usp=sharing Shared resources can be found here].
 
 
==== Incorporation ====
We are incorporated as a society under the Alberta Societies Act. We do not pay income tax, and receive a property tax exemption from the City (coordinated through our landlords). We are not a registered charity, and are unable to issue charitable tax receipts.
 
==== Bookkeeping ====
We use Quickbooks Online.
 
==== Floor plans ====
* [https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1RD2FH030NsYrgW3jIPNGu4f-rRy-U3p7?usp=sharing Floor plans and components for both shops]
* View & edit in [https://forums.sketchup.com/t/sketchup-make-2017-download-links/74172 Sketchup Make 2017] (free)
 
==== Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop ====
Opened 2014
* [https://photos.app.goo.gl/joGN39LcXt2y8ofE8 Workshop photos]
 
==== Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop ====
Opened 2020
* [https://photos.app.goo.gl/U9BiGRr45Dkc4JJi9 Workshop photos]
 
==== Bike storage ====
[[File:Bike hanger.jpg|thumb|alt=Bikes and wheels in track rack bike hanger|Bikes and wheels in track rack bike hanger]]
* We use Dero Track Rack (ceiling mount), mounted on a [https://www.grainger.ca/en/category/Strut-Channel/Conduit-Mounting/c/12782/?aType=brc steel framing strut channel] structure (see floor plan for detailed assembly). Track racks cost about $600 per section (each section holds 13 bikes), and we ordered from Habitat Systems in Canada.
 
Strut channel can be purchased locally from hardware suppliers, in small quantities for about $30-40 per 10 ft section. We acquired much of ours as donations from a local business that was relocating/renovating.
 
==== Flooring ====
We have bare concrete floors in the workshops. We use antifatigue garage tiles over cheap carpet overlay (from Rona) under work benches. Our south shop has tiles from [https://swisstrax.ca/ Swisstrax], but any equivalent option would work. Our downtown location has tiles liquidated from a commercial bike shop.
 
We use dollies to roll repair stands out of the way when we want to convert our shop space into social spaces.
 
==== Parts storage ====
[[File:Used parts.jpg|thumb|alt=Parts hanging from 5-hook gridwall hangers|Parts hanging from 5-hook gridwall hangers]]
* We mount 8x4 [https://eddies.com/store-fixtures-hardware/grid-panels-fixtures.html gridwall panels] on the outside of our unistrut bike storage structure. Standard gridwall fixtures are then used for parts storage. In particular, 5-hook waterfalls are extremely useful for hanging handlebars, stems, cranks, chainrings, and more. (See shop photos above.)
 
* Much of our gridwall and fixtures was acquired for free from businesses that renovated or closed, but can also be purchased from local retail fixture supply stores/warehouses.
 
==== Printing ====
* We use local printers [https://rayacom.com/ Rayacom] as well as discount Canada-wide printers [https://www.vistaprint.ca/ Vistaprint].
 
==== Membership database ====
* We use [https://civicrm.org/ CiviCRM] running on [https://wordpress.org/ WordPress] to manage our membership registration. It includes automated renewal reminders by email and/or text message (connected through our RingCentral account).
 
==== Web hosting ====
* We run our CiviCRM and other apps on a [https://www.digitalocean.com/ DigitalOcean] droplet, which costs $10 US/month.
* Our primary website is hosted on [https://www.squarespace.com/ Squarespace].
 
==== POS ====
* We use [https://squareup.com/ Square Register] for our POS and inventory management, as well as online webstore, but we don't use square for processing in-person payments.
* We have regular credit card terminals supplied by our bank. We pay about 1.5% in fees using this system and about $20/month for the terminals, rather than 3%+ that Square Register would charge.
 
==== Phone & internet ====
Our internet is provided by Shaw, and costs about $75/month per location.
 
Our phone is VOIP, provided by [https://www.ringcentral.com/ RingCentral], and costs about $1100/year total for two lines. We could probably get cheaper than that with someone else. We use analog telephone adapters (ATA) that plug into our internet router, and then plug into a regular phone jack (disconnected from the telcom, but connected throughout our space), which allows us to simply plug regular analog phones and our security system into the phone system.
 
Voice mails are automatically sent as emails with voice-to-text, so we can read them from our email.
 
We have an automated assistant menu that answers and filters all our calls so we don't have to answer as many voicemails.
 
It also lets us set up phone extensions that go to external personal phone numbers at no extra cost (we can set the hours on extensions, so they go straight to voicemail outside of those hours).
 
Text messages are also received as emails. We can also send and receive text messages with our business number through a web page and/or phone app.
 
==== Digital documents ====
We use Google Workspace for Nonprofits and organize all our documents in Google Drive for free.
 
==== Security ====
We have Nest cameras and Ring security, including door and motion sensors. Due to repeated break-ins, including multiple broken large glass windows, we also have bars across the interior.
 
A Nest subscription allows 30 day video event history from multiple cameras for $80/year.


== Location ==
==== Popcorn machine ====
We bought a [https://popcornmachine.ca/collections/popcorn-machines/products/canada-popcorn-popcorn-machine-8oz popcorn machine] and [https://bikeedmonton.ca/popcorn-machine rent it out] to businesses, student groups, and even individuals hosting parties. It feeds volunteers, supports social events (e.g. movie nights), and after only a few rentals, has paid for itself.


[[Image:Ebc_map.gif]] [[Image:EBC-North-Map.GIF]]
==== Bike Parking ====
* https://bikeedmonton.ca/racks
* [https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1qZj6iOEWxMOU04-ktzCqheVWAHO7vpId?usp=sharing Bike parking info]
* [https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1mRdXzJaNWYieclKPSUW9ZHdKYHG8kAOE?usp=sharing Staple bicycle racks open source CAD designs] - We work with a local metal fabricator (Special Metal Fabricating) to build these staple racks, which we rent and resell. They can be galvanized or primed & powder coated: we have found just painting the racks isn't durable enough. Local people searching to buy bike racks, but who aren't developers familiar with custom fabrication, find and order through us (rather than U-Line etc).
* We rent [https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1cU8BTbyJs6joUJQyweaTiJClLDiwIEwl?usp=sharing portable bicycle racks] to event organizers for $10/rack per event (unsupervised), or charge additional amounts for supervised bike parking events (where we also accept donations) or bike valets. They are easily constructed from conduit and EMT tubing, available for cheap locally from electrical wholesale/contractor suppliers (or much more expensively from Home Depot).


[http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Edmonton+Bicycle+Commuters,+Edmonton,+AB&sll=53.515626,-113.490453&sspn=0.004625,0.008615&ie=UTF8&ll=53.515626,-113.490443&spn=0.00925,0.017231&t=h&z=16&iwloc=A EBC South Location on Google Maps]
==== Suppliers ====
* We have accounts with Cycle Babac and D'Amour. See [[Distributors#Canadian_Suppliers]].


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Revision as of 05:14, 16 March 2022

Bike Edmonton
Website https://bikeedmonton.ca
Email info@bikeedmonton.ca
Founded 1980
Location Edmonton, Canada
Language
Services Offered
Mission Statement We work to make cycling accessible for everyone, because we believe that an Edmonton where anyone can choose to cycle is an Edmonton that’s better for all.



Learn how to fix your bike and explore the city by bike. Buy a refurbished bike, or donate a disused one. Meet other cyclists, and help us advocate for a vibrant city.

Whether you ride once a week, 265 bike-friendly days a year, or year-round, Bike Edmonton gives you the tools you need to enjoy cycling. Established as the non-profit Edmonton Bicycle Commuters Society in 1980 and now called Bike Edmonton, we operate two volunteer-run community bike workshops, provide cycling education for people of all ages, host events with community partners year-round, and represent you at City Hall.

Contact Info

Mail

Bike Edmonton

Box 1819 Station Main

Edmonton AB T5J 2P2

E-mail

info@bikeedmonton.ca

Location

Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop

8001 102 St

Edmonton AB

T6E 4A2

780-433-BIKE (2453)

Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop

10612 105 Ave

Edmonton AB

T5H 0L2

780-433-BIKE (2453)

Transit

Nearby bus stops to Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop are:

  • 2723 (westbound on Whyte Ave) and 2864 (eastbound) [Routes 4, 7, and 94].


Nearby bus stops to Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop are:

  • MacEwan LRT Station
  • 11301 (eastbound on 105 Ave) [Route 7]
  • 1605 (northbound on 109 St) [Routes 7, 8, 15]
  • 1557 (southbound on 109 St) [Routes 8, 15]
  • 1989 (westbound on 104 Ave) [Routes 2, 7, 8, 15, 111, 112, 560]
  • 1824 (eastbound on 104 Ave) [Routes 2, 8, 15, 111, 112, 201, 208]

Website

History

https://bikeedmonton.ca/history/

Services Offered

Community Bicycle Workshops

Bike Edmonton Downtown and Bike Edmonton South are fully-equipped, volunteer-run community bike workshops. We have all the tools (including specialty bicycle tools) needed to repair and maintain your bicycle, and mechanics to teach you how to do it. We also have a vast selection of used and new parts and bicycles available for purchase.

Recycling

Bike Edmonton's mandate includes recycling. We accept donations of bicycles and parts, and will refurbish, reuse, and recycle them. We recycle metal as well as rubber (tubes and tires).

Cycling education

We offer courses for adults to learn to ride, children with special needs to learn to ride, as well courses on on-road cycling for cyclists of all ages and skill levels (emphasizing riding safely and effectively). We also offer basic mechanic courses, specialized courses (e.g. wheel building), mechanic training courses (to become a mechanic), and topical courses (e.g. introduction to winter riding).

CAN-BIKE courses are offered through Bike Edmonton. The Canadian Cycling Association's CAN-BIKE program are courses oriented toward recreational and utilitarian cycling, focused on cycling safely and enjoyably on the road. The CAN-BIKE cycling safety program provides a nationally standardized set of courses that can be taught through a variety of organizations who are interested in education, safety and health.

CAN-BIKE Instructors are nationally certified highly skilled cyclists and instructors.

Ghost Bikes

Ghost Bikes are small and somber memorials for bicyclists who are killed or hit on the street. A bicycle is painted all white and locked to a street sign near the crash site, accompanied by a small plaque. They serve as reminders of the tragedy that took place on an otherwise anonymous street corner, and as quiet statements in support of cyclists' right to safe travel.

Bike Edmonton sets up ghost bike memorials around the city as tributes to individuals, and reminders to all cyclists and drivers.

The Spoke - Youth Earn-a-Bike Program

We offer a youth earn-a-bike program called The Spoke.

Women, Transgender, and Gender Non-binary Program

We offer WTGNB programming.

Other services

For a full list of services, please visit [1]

Some examples include:

  • Low-cost bicycles (typically between $40-120)
  • Bike cargo trailer rental
  • Bicycle rental
  • Secure bicycle parking at events around the city
  • Advocacy for cyclists
  • Education


Resources for replication and distribution

All dollar amounts are in CAD unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Shared resources can be found here.


Incorporation

We are incorporated as a society under the Alberta Societies Act. We do not pay income tax, and receive a property tax exemption from the City (coordinated through our landlords). We are not a registered charity, and are unable to issue charitable tax receipts.

Bookkeeping

We use Quickbooks Online.

Floor plans

Bike Edmonton South Community Workshop

Opened 2014

Bike Edmonton Downtown Community Workshop

Opened 2020

Bike storage

Bikes and wheels in track rack bike hanger
Bikes and wheels in track rack bike hanger
  • We use Dero Track Rack (ceiling mount), mounted on a steel framing strut channel structure (see floor plan for detailed assembly). Track racks cost about $600 per section (each section holds 13 bikes), and we ordered from Habitat Systems in Canada.

Strut channel can be purchased locally from hardware suppliers, in small quantities for about $30-40 per 10 ft section. We acquired much of ours as donations from a local business that was relocating/renovating.

Flooring

We have bare concrete floors in the workshops. We use antifatigue garage tiles over cheap carpet overlay (from Rona) under work benches. Our south shop has tiles from Swisstrax, but any equivalent option would work. Our downtown location has tiles liquidated from a commercial bike shop.

We use dollies to roll repair stands out of the way when we want to convert our shop space into social spaces.

Parts storage

Parts hanging from 5-hook gridwall hangers
Parts hanging from 5-hook gridwall hangers
  • We mount 8x4 gridwall panels on the outside of our unistrut bike storage structure. Standard gridwall fixtures are then used for parts storage. In particular, 5-hook waterfalls are extremely useful for hanging handlebars, stems, cranks, chainrings, and more. (See shop photos above.)
  • Much of our gridwall and fixtures was acquired for free from businesses that renovated or closed, but can also be purchased from local retail fixture supply stores/warehouses.

Printing

Membership database

  • We use CiviCRM running on WordPress to manage our membership registration. It includes automated renewal reminders by email and/or text message (connected through our RingCentral account).

Web hosting

  • We run our CiviCRM and other apps on a DigitalOcean droplet, which costs $10 US/month.
  • Our primary website is hosted on Squarespace.

POS

  • We use Square Register for our POS and inventory management, as well as online webstore, but we don't use square for processing in-person payments.
  • We have regular credit card terminals supplied by our bank. We pay about 1.5% in fees using this system and about $20/month for the terminals, rather than 3%+ that Square Register would charge.

Phone & internet

Our internet is provided by Shaw, and costs about $75/month per location.

Our phone is VOIP, provided by RingCentral, and costs about $1100/year total for two lines. We could probably get cheaper than that with someone else. We use analog telephone adapters (ATA) that plug into our internet router, and then plug into a regular phone jack (disconnected from the telcom, but connected throughout our space), which allows us to simply plug regular analog phones and our security system into the phone system.

Voice mails are automatically sent as emails with voice-to-text, so we can read them from our email.

We have an automated assistant menu that answers and filters all our calls so we don't have to answer as many voicemails.

It also lets us set up phone extensions that go to external personal phone numbers at no extra cost (we can set the hours on extensions, so they go straight to voicemail outside of those hours).

Text messages are also received as emails. We can also send and receive text messages with our business number through a web page and/or phone app.

Digital documents

We use Google Workspace for Nonprofits and organize all our documents in Google Drive for free.

Security

We have Nest cameras and Ring security, including door and motion sensors. Due to repeated break-ins, including multiple broken large glass windows, we also have bars across the interior.

A Nest subscription allows 30 day video event history from multiple cameras for $80/year.

Popcorn machine

We bought a popcorn machine and rent it out to businesses, student groups, and even individuals hosting parties. It feeds volunteers, supports social events (e.g. movie nights), and after only a few rentals, has paid for itself.

Bike Parking

  • https://bikeedmonton.ca/racks
  • Bike parking info
  • Staple bicycle racks open source CAD designs - We work with a local metal fabricator (Special Metal Fabricating) to build these staple racks, which we rent and resell. They can be galvanized or primed & powder coated: we have found just painting the racks isn't durable enough. Local people searching to buy bike racks, but who aren't developers familiar with custom fabrication, find and order through us (rather than U-Line etc).
  • We rent portable bicycle racks to event organizers for $10/rack per event (unsupervised), or charge additional amounts for supervised bike parking events (where we also accept donations) or bike valets. They are easily constructed from conduit and EMT tubing, available for cheap locally from electrical wholesale/contractor suppliers (or much more expensively from Home Depot).

Suppliers

See Also