Posts Tagged ‘pedicab’

Pedicab Princesses: Ride of the Day (ROTD)

Friday, August 27th, 2010

CIMG0459

Three local lasses loaded up on an RR pedicab last night and lapped up their entire adventure from midtown to 15th St & 7th Avenue, where a manicure and pedicure awaited them and their clients. Each one thanked thoroughly their perspicacious pedicab peddler for convincing them to climb aboard, wondering aloud about why they’d failed to take a ride all these years despite consistent exposure to pedicabs as midtown professionals.

Another gotham pedicab story with a happy ending – as almost all expeditions on Revolution pedicabs seem to end . . .

After Pedi-geddon

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Pedi-geddon has come and gone, with minimal carnage. Mostly the cops just stopped pedicab drivers – a bunch of them more than once – and gave out multiple tickets for multiple violations. A few drivers who meticulously adhered to the rules did escape un-ticketed.

While walking and riding around midtown on Friday night and Saturday afternoon I didn’t see any pedicabs without registration plates, though I did see a few without rate cards. I also didn’t see any pedicabs getting confiscated. On Sunday afternoon, however, walking home from the 34th Street subway station, I spotted a couple Main Streets in the parking lot of the Midtown South precinct on 35th Street. One looked like its canopy was damaged; the other looked like it was in decent condition.

Right now, I – and many other pedicab drivers who waited till the last minute to apply for a pedicab driver’s license – are waiting to receive our licenses in the mail. When I applied on Wednesday November 18th I was told I’d get my license in about two weeks. I’m guessing that about 85 other drivers applied for their licenses on that day as well, and that other days that week were similarly busy – which means that there should be a significant increase in the number of pedicabs plying the streets by the end of next week.

Yesterday evening I happened across a blue Main Street sporting a tongue-in-cheek answer to the City Council’s prohibition on pedicabs in the bike lanes. I don’t recall the exact wording, but the message ran something like this: “Sorry, not allowed in the bike lane! If you don’t like it tell the City Council!”

I’m curious to see what it will be like to drive a pedicab while steering clear of bike lanes. My guess is that it will make pedicabbing more difficult, and dangerous, since it will force me to ride squarely in the stream of traffic on busy, fast-moving streets like 6th & 8th Avenues. On the other hand, riding in the bike lane can be more trouble than it’s worth, on avenues where motor weapons are prone to use it as a parking area. Skirting said motor weapons – which requires darting out into traffic – can be a bit sketchy.

I’m also wondering how motor-weapon drivers will react to pedicabs driving right down the middles of crosstown streets with bike lanes. I expect they’ll be honking at the pedicabs to get over to the side of the road – but we won’t be permitted to, by law. Which means we’ll end up slowing traffic, and possibly causing scattered outbreaks of road rage. Ah, well – can’t say I feel too sorry about that.

Revolution Goes Green Festival

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Last weekend Revolution traveled south to Washington D.C. to exhibit at Green America’s Green Festival. We borrowed a pedicab and a rickshaw van from Via Velo – a non-profit that partners with the local Boys & Girls Club to provide eco-delivery and shuttle service in Alexandria – and rode them into downtown D.C. by way of the Mount Vernon bike trail. In our booth at the convention center we set the rickshaw van up on jacks so festival-goers could try riding it, and took the pedicab for a few (illicit) spins in an unoccupied area of the exhibit hall. Most of our aspiring rickshaw van drivers were kids who’d never seen such a thing before; in some cases their feet couldn’t reach the pedals, even with the seat in its lowest possible position. But hey – when it comes to (kicking the fossil-fool habit and) getting the hang of organic transport, you can never start too young….

Get 'em while they're young!

Get 'em while they're young!

The public was of course curious about Revolution’s trikes, especially the rickshaw van, since most people had not hitherto seen anything like it. The three questions I heard most frequently were: “Does it have a motor?” “How hard is it to pedal?” and, “How much does it cost?”

Neither of the trikes in our Green Festival booth had a motor. Of the twenty-two trikes that comprise Revolution’s NYC fleet, only one – the Lynch – has a motor, which powers an electric assist.

The assist is a mixed blessing. It’s great if you’re hauling a super-heavy load, or ascending a very long and/or very steep incline. I’ve greatly appreciated it while making deliveries on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, or driving across the Queensboro Bridge. However: If you’re using the electric assist correctly – that is, sparingly, such that you won’t run out of juice before your job’s finished – you’re engaging it maybe 10 – 25% of the time. You’re hauling its weight – about 110 extra pounds for the battery plus the motor – 100% of the time. So even when you’re deadheading back to the depot, free as a bird, mission accomplished…you still feel like you’re hauling the equivalent of a couple small children in the cargo hold. That can be – for this cargo courier anyway – a little demoralizing. In general, I’d say you’re better off without the assist: You lose the option of that extra boost, yes, but you also lose the burden of the extra weight – and most of the time you don’t need the boost anyway.

RR's Head of Sales peddles a rickshaw van.

Head of Sales peddles rickshaw van.

How hard is it to pedal a rickshaw? Well, that depends on the load, the incline, and the rider’s degree of fitness. In general, if you’re a decent bike rider you’ll be able to pedal a work trike. Yes, your muscles will ache at first, but as you continue to ride
you’ll build stamina and strength in lungs, heart and legs. The fact that each trike has twenty-four gears makes it possible to keep pedaling even when your route is uphill and your load is heavy – you may go more slowly, as a result of shifting into a very low gear, but you will get there.

How much does a rickshaw cost? A new hard-top rickshaw van runs about $7,000 (there’s also a new model with an aluminum cargo box that sells for about $6,000). A new pedicab will set you back about $6,000. Not cheap, certainly, but a great investment in your health, your business, our nation’s clean energy future…. Also, of course, a trike runs on muscle power, which means once you’ve purchased it you’re pretty much done paying for it. How many motor weapons can you say that about?

We’d love to take a couple rickshaws out to play at a future NYC Green Festival, but we hear the costs of holding a Javits Center event would be prohibitive for small green businesses. So for now the rickshaw-curious will just have to visit us at our Midtown West headquarters. We’ll keep the organic transport going for you!