Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In

lyon_bike_share.jpg

A bike-share station in Lyon, France

It was a vacation in Paris a couple of months ago that gave David Haskell, executive director of the Forum for Urban Design, the idea. Haskell was so impressed by the preparations the French capital is making for its massive municipal bike-sharing program that he decided he had to get New Yorkers interested in the possibility of launching such a project here.

"It seemed like the perfect moment for it," says Haskell, who says he got an enthusiastic response from sponsors like Clear Channel, which might bid on a bike-sharing program in New York given the chance, and from city officials.

A scant few weeks later, Haskell and his team have put together the New York Bike-Share Project, an impressive lineup of events scheduled to take place at the Storefront for Art and Architecture at 87 Kenmare St. from July 7-11. The project encompasses an exhibit on bike-sharing programs as they exist in European cities such as Barcelona and Lyon, including a full-scale bike station; presentations from companies that run such programs; a design charette; and an on-site experiment, in the form of free bike rentals. (For a more detailed schedule, look here.) There will be multiple opportunities for public input and comment, all of which will be consolidated and presented on the project's website.

Haskell acknowledges that certain problems, such as liability issues, would have to be solved before bike-sharing in New York could become a reality. But he points out that European cities have already addressed the theft and vandalism concerns that New Yorkers might anticipate.

"We're focusing on real examples of these programs working," says Haskell. "This is not some urban designer's fantasy."

Streetsblog will definitely be attending some of the events, but we'd love to hear from others who make it down there as well.

Photo: pug freak via Flickr

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

Thursday’s Headlines Are a Sneak Preview

Want to see what happens when a city makes major transit cuts? Just look at Philadelphia. It's not pretty.

August 28, 2025

What I’ve Learned From Getting Transit Wrong

"Advocacy isn’t about pretending you’ve always been right. It’s about learning, adapting, and bringing those lessons into the fight for better transit and better cities."

August 28, 2025

L.A. Council Committee Approves Step toward Eliminating Parking Requirements

Off-street parking at new developments is not going away. If the city doesn't require parking, developers will still build parking.

August 27, 2025

Wednesday’s Headlines Get Off the Cheese Wagon

Transporting K-12 students via public transit can save schools money, but there are challenges involved, like teaching children how to use the system.

August 27, 2025

The Fall of Philadelphia

"Cutting almost half of a transit system is not a way to make it more efficient. It more like asking whether you’d like to keep your heart or your lungs."

August 27, 2025

Doomsday For SEPTA Is Bad News For Everyone

Deep cuts to Philadelphia's transit system will have devastating impacts in the City of Brotherly Love — and other cities may be next.

August 27, 2025
See all posts