Students who want to borrow a bike must apply by writing a letter explaining how they'll use the bike. Lendees are responsible for care of the bike and must take classes on bike maintenance and traffic safety.
Out of the original 20 Kona bicycles in the program (15 Kona Dew mountain bikes and Kona Afrika commuter bikes), two have been stolen since the Bike Library program began in the spring of 2008. Bikes are lended out on a quarterly basis.
Learn more:
- City On A Hill Press: Bike Library Lends Wheels To UCSC Community
- UCSC Recreation: Bike Library.
2 comments:
I'm curious about how effective these programs are.
Our local university, The University of Southern Miss started a similar program last year. The bikes were originally left on racks, free for all to use. All 15 bikes were stolen in a couple days.
Most were recovered and they revised the program to be similar to the one UC Santa Cruz has. Students have to apply and are issues and bike + lock for the semester.
Even when I was attending classes there, I never once saw anyone riding one of the program bikes. I've seen a couple on campus locked up that never moved, and a couple locked to railings at nearby apartments, but never in use.
Of course not charging $15 for a permit to park your bike on campus would have been another way to encourage biking, but that's another story.
Hi Rob; the program I'm most familiar with is the Campus Bike Shop bike rentals at Stanford University, mostly because the head mechanic there is a friend. It's a much larger program than what's available at UCSC and other places. At Stanford, students must pay each semester for the rental bikes. I think this encourages students to take a little better care of the bikes.
Like you observed, I think just leaving them in a rack for anybody to use invites theft and abuse. The Google campus in Mountain View, CA tried something like this -- I've seen their blue bikes all up and down the Peninsula in various states of disrepair.
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