Bike Parking
Bike Parking at the shop
There were 3 options proposed on 9/2/2010 and they cover the following
- maintain space for work stands and tables outside - maximize safe bike parking - maintain pedestrian pathways, especially to the door near the greeter's desk
These are :
* File:Bike kitchen parking option 1.pdf * File:Bike kitchen parking option 2.pdf * File:Bike kitchen parking option 3.jpeg
Anne Torney of Soloma E.T.C. Reminds us of the following
"An important constraint you might already be aware of : the bike racks can’t block the area between the storefront and the chains – this is a fire exit path."
The architects for the building were Solomon, E.T.C., not David Baker. Solomon is part of WRT, where I work as a landscape architect. We did the landscape architecture for the courtyards.
The "bricks" are real individual unit pavers. Attaching something firmly to the ground would require removal of bricks, digging down through the gravel base that is below the bricks, and pouring a concrete footing. Using individual U-racks would require doing this for each point the rack hits the ground, i.e., two each. That's a lot of work. I'd recommend going with a large multi-bike rack, which may be secured at two or four points only.
The rack I'd recommend is a series of upside-down U's welded together along the bottoms. See this link:
http://www.creativepipe.com/gauntlet_gl_series_bike_racks.htm
(Note that some of them have a C-chanel across the bottom, but others have a flat bar.)