In a public hallway off Haywood Street, volunteers installed Asheville’s first downtown bike locker on June 24. The big metal box, split diagonally on the inside to make room for two bicycles, is one of 10 public lockers being installed in the city’s parking decks and the Rankin-Haywood hall beside the Office of Economic Development, says Asheville Transportation Planner Barb Mee. “Some will be coin-operated; some will be set up for monthly rentals,” she says, emphasizing the public/private collaboration that has brought the idea from concept to installation.
The lockers are part of the ongoing implementation of the city’s comprehensive bicycle plan, which was adopted in 2008, Mee explains. “During the development of the [city’s] bicycle plan, one of the facilities that cyclists told us was missing was secure bicycle parking,” she says. Mee credits the efforts of such organizations as Asheville on Bikes and the Asheville Bicycle Racing Club, just to name a couple (volunteers from both these groups were on hand to help insert the box panels, power-drive the screws and test the fit for a real bicycle).
Bike lockers are larger than typical lockers and allow cyclists to store their bicycle and equipment in a secure location, as demonstrated by Mike Sule of Asheville on Bikes during the installation process. His group and others have raised money to decorate the nondescript lockers with art, Mee mentions.
She also notes the city’s parking services will manage the lockers and reports the total cost at less than $20,000: For rental information, contact that department at 259-5792.
— Margaret Williams
The lockers are part of the ongoing implementation of the city’s comprehensive bicycle plan, which was adopted in 2008, Mee explains. “During the development of the [city’s] bicycle plan, one of the facilities that cyclists told us was missing was secure bicycle parking,” she says. Mee credits the efforts of such organizations as Asheville on Bikes and the Asheville Bicycle Racing Club, just to name a couple (volunteers from both these groups were on hand to help insert the box panels, power-drive the screws and test the fit for a real bicycle).
Bike lockers are larger than typical lockers and allow cyclists to store their bicycle and equipment in a secure location, as demonstrated by Mike Sule of Asheville on Bikes during the installation process. His group and others have raised money to decorate the nondescript lockers with art, Mee mentions.
She also notes the city’s parking services will manage the lockers and reports the total cost at less than $20,000: For rental information, contact that department at 259-5792.
— Margaret Williams
Read more articles in:
NewsSubscribe to XpressMail. Free Sneak Peek. Every Week.

Want to know what's coming out in Xpress this week before the paper even hits the stands?
We've got your free sneak peek, along with deals available in XpressMail, our weekly email newsletter. (It's the best we can do without time travel.)
-
Comments
-
Related Articles
-
Comments
Make a comment
Smart Move
By JMAC
06/25/2009
I lived in Japan for about a year in the 80's. The sidewalks were lined with bikes. Nobody locked theirs and none were ever stolen.
By John
06/26/2009
$20,000 = 10 bike lockers
$20,000 = 1 parking deck space
hmmmm.
By David Roat
06/26/2009
Communist Plot.
Bikes are communist, Cars are freedom.
By Piffy!
06/27/2009
Obama and his cohorts have their hand into this wasteful spending. Darn liberal bicycling terrorists. What's next? Sandal lockers?
By PatD
06/29/2009
this bike locker is a pipe bomb.
By Piffy!
06/29/2009
I like the idea of bike locks ... but at 2 grand each? I feel like a valet ought to be included for that price!
By John
06/29/2009