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Jumat, 15 April 2011

Bloomberg Does Not Support Local Businesses - Local Bike Maker Says Small Business Initiative Slighted Him by Angela Chen - NY1

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The Bloomberg administration does NOT support local businesses...



Worksman Cycles, an Ozone Park bicycle manufacturer whose business has been in New York City for over 100 years says the mayor's office snubbed him.

Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

The Hands That Steer Are Building the Bikes by Sean Patrick Farrell - NYTimes.com

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Like thousands of other New Yorkers, Jason Henkle throws a leg over a bicycle every day and pedals to work. Unlike most of his fellow riders, Mr. Henkle built his understated single-speed bike by hand.

Mr. Henkle is among a small group of dedicated New York cyclists who have begun building their own bicycle frames. Their hand-constructed cycles are often custom made for a tailored fit and sometimes include personal touches like the small metal pi symbol Mr. Henkle affixes to his machines.

“They’re pi-cycles,” said Mr. Henkle, making the kind of pun befitting his job as a high school math teacher. He keeps two of his bikes in his living room and often spends his evenings and weekends in a tight storage room he has converted into a frame building shop in his apartment building in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn.

A recent Saturday afternoon found him methodically filing steel tubes for a precise fit on a road frame that’s half-finished. “It’s a nice combination of an athletic activity, craft, science and engineering all balled up into one,” said Mr. Henkle, 30, who figures it takes him about 80 hours to complete a frame.

Some people, like Mr. Henkle, treat the craft as a hobby, building bikes for themselves and a few friends. But a growing number of shops are building made-to-measure frames for customers.

“I got to chat with some of the pros,” he said. “I was definitely able to walk away with some good info.”Many other cyclists in New York and the rest of the country have taken up files, torches and even bamboo and glue to build their own bikes. The North American Handmade Bicycle Show, which started in 2005 with 23 frame builders exhibiting their wares, has grown into a Concours d’Elegance for two-wheelers, featuring more than 160 microbike exhibitors. Mr. Henkle attended the 2011 show last week in Austin, Tex., to learn the latest techniques.

Anchoring the scene is Johnny Coast, a 35-year-old with seven years of frame building and, by his count, 200 to 300 frames under his belt. Mr. Coast’s frames, which are highly regarded for their classic lines and elegant lugs — the often-decorative joints that join tubes — start at $2,250.

Mr. Coast and many builders embrace the small imperfections that are less likely to be spotted in mass-produced machine-built bikes.

“I think people like seeing the hand of the builder,” he said. “You see a little file mark, you see a human made this.”

Like many hobby builders, Lance Mercado, 35, began by making bicycle frames for himself and friends. He has been building custom steel frames professionally since 2007, after taking a popular course in Oregon, and is the owner of SquareBuilt, a shop in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, that specializes in single-speed and track bikes.

“I basically was going to buy a bike one day and saw the ad to learn to build a bike,” he said. “So I went, and people started asking me to build them one, too.” He eventually dropped his job as a waiter to pursue the business.

Krista Ciminera learning the craft with help from Lance Mercado.
Krista Ciminera learning the craft with help from Lance Mercado. Chang W. Lee/The New York Times 

Mr. Mercado’s shop has become a nexus of the frame-building community. Krista Ciminera, 27, a messenger, is building a frame for herself and learning the craft at SquareBuilt.

“I really like making stuff with my hands,” Ms. Ciminera said, “and it feels good to be at these machines with sparks flying.”

Recently, Mr. Henkle stopped into SquareBuilt for help on a problem with a lug on his current project. Mr. Mercado welcomes the growing interest.

“The more builders there are in New York, the better for everyone to learn off each other,” Mr. Mercado said.

The city has long been a bike-building center. For more than a century Worksman Cycles in Queens has been making durable utility bicycles and tricycles, and Brooklyn Machine Works has been creating BMX and downhill bikes for more than 15 years. But the community of smaller shops, especially in Brooklyn, continues to broaden. Horse Cycles is a one-man custom-steel shop in Williamsburg, and Bamboo Bike Studio in Red Hook offers a two-day frame-building course using bamboo.

“You can make a bike and make it just as good as any other bike,” said Marty Odlin, 29, who started Bamboo Bike Studio in 2009 and has since expanded to San Francisco. A basic frame-building class costs $632, and proceeds go toward projects to supply bicycles to people in the developing world.

The studio has taught more than 250 people — from 12-year-olds to riders in their 70s — to make the distinctive frames. “They’re beautiful, and they’re really beautiful to the people who build them,” Mr. Odlin said, referring to the bamboo bikes but echoing the thoughts of many hand builders. “There’s a pride thing.”

Jumat, 04 Maret 2011

Ozone Park Bike Factory Wants to Ride with City by Anna Gustafson - Queens Chronicle

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Wayne Sosin poses with one of his bikes. photo by anna gustafson


New York City’s last remaining bicycle manufacturer, based in Ozone Park, is hoping the city it has called home for more than a century will select it for an upcoming bike sharing program.


Worksman Cycles President Wayne Sosin said his company submitted a bid last week in hopes of being selected to provide thousands of the bikes for the program the city is slated to launch in the spring of 2012.

“It’s such a wonderful idea,” Sosin said of the bike share program that would allow individuals to pay an hour fee not yet specified to rent a bicycle in Manhattan. “It creates a friendlier commuting system where people don’t have to pay an arm and a leg for gas.”

There would be spots around the city, most likely concentrated in Midtown, where riders could drop off and pick up the bicycles. DOT officials have said they would like the program to expand to other boroughs as well.

“Biking has become a serious transportation option in New York and bike share is the clear next step,” city Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan said. “New York’s ideal geography, high residential and commercial density and growing bike infrastructure make it the perfect option for short trips since over 50 percent of trips in NYC are under two miles.”

Worksman Cycles, at 95th Avenue between 101st and 102nd streets, was founded in 1898 by Morris Worksman, who believed a well-designed three-wheleed cycle could replace the horse and wagon.

The original cycles were built in a small shop where the World Trade Center would come to be located. The company moved to Ozone Park in 1979, and it continues to make industrial-strength tricycles and bicycles that are used around the city — and world, from neighborhood pizza shops to the U.S. Army in the Middle East.

A number of companies use Worksman bicycles, including General Motors and Mercedes Benz, as do other bike-share programs in Tulsa, Okla. and Princeton University.

“We had been talking about ordering a crate of bikes from China, but we wanted to have fewer, better bikes,” said Tom Cooper, a member of the Tulsa Townies LLC, the group that runs the bike share program in the Oklahoma city. “We discovered one of the local bike shops here in Tulsa had provided Worksman bikes to a large industrial facility where bikes sat outside, and they had held up to the rigors of being outside. Our bikes were going to sit outside for most of the year, so that was important to us.”

Cooper said the approximate 75 Worksman bikes they use have worked well and noted he expects they will be ordering more in the near future.

Because the bicycles have “substantial” frames and rims, they even deter vandals and thieves, Cooper said.

Theft has been a problem in other bike share programs, perhaps most notably in the Parisian one, according to 2009 reports from “Le Monde,” a French daily, and “The New York Times.” However, while there were reports in Paris of thousands of bicycles being stolen, or even tossed into the Seine River, cities in the U.S., including Washington, D.C. and Minneapolis, have seen very little theft and vandalism.

Five bicycles have been reported stolen since D.C. launched its share program with 1,100 cycles in September 2010, and Minneapolis has lost two bikes since the city began its share program with 700 bicycles in June.

Should Worksman become the city’s bike supplier, it would also be in charge of repairing any damaged cycles.

For Sosin, the opportunity to land the job with the city would obviously be a financial boon — but it would be something more than that, he says.

It is a step toward a greener, more bicycle-friendly city where people would not think twice about hopping on their bike to go to work.

“I went to Amsterdam to learn more about the bike culture and saw it was part of the daily transportation for most people,” said Sosin, who grew up in Fresh Meadows and now lives on Long Island. “There were people in nice work clothes on bicycles and moms bringing kids to school on bikes. Blue collar workers to heads of companies think nothing of jumping on their bikes. It was really very motivating for me to see that. They know how to respect bicyclists. That can happen here, but it won’t happen overnight. It’ll happen over 10, 20 years.”

Sosin stressed it would be good for the local economy because he would likely have to hire another 30 to 40 people if Worksman landed the contract. About 50 people now work at the business, which is solar-powered.

“Plus you’d be getting something actually made in the United States,” Sosin said.

The Ozone Park factory is a relic of the country as it was decades ago, when blue collar workers had little trouble finding jobs using their hands and goods often had the Made in the U.S.A. stamp.

One of the ways the company has been able to remain in the states, instead of going abroad as so many others have, is because it has found this niche market making industrial strength bikes and tricycles.

And a deal with the city really could cement a future in Queens, Sosin said.

“The American bike industry has really left, but we’re still here,” Sosin said. “We want to be here.”

Jumat, 18 Februari 2011

CB 6 Wants to Be Briefed by City Before DOT Proposes Bike Lanes by Joe Anuta - YourNabe.com

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A man rides down 108th Street in Rego Park, where bike lanes are scarce. Photo by Joe Anuta
Community leaders in Forest Hills and Rego Park are already preparing for a contentious addition to the neighborhood — bike lanes — though a single line has yet to be planned or painted.

On Feb. 10, the Community Board 6 sent a letter to city Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan requesting that “all proposals to establish new bicycle lanes on NYC streets shall be submitted to the affected Community Board(s) prior to their implementation.”

After the proposal, the boards would have 60 days to review the plan and submit an advisory recommendation, according to the resolution. In addition, the DOT would need to respond to any of the board’s concerns.

The measure was proposed by John Dereszewski, chairman of the board’s Transportation Committee.

“I am a bike lane supporter,” Dereszewski said. But despite his affinity for the roadside additions, which have sparked heated debate in other boroughs, he still wanted to be kept in the loop when and if the lanes ever come to the neighborhood.

Currently, the area is nearly devoid of bike lanes.

The DOT did not respond to questions about the bikes lanes.

The resolution, in addition to providing the board with information, was also designed to assist the DOT.

Several board members listed streets that might seem like good bike routes but pose specific problems for additional lanes. For example, Yellowstone Boulevard would be good for a bike lane, one member said, except for the area underneath the Long Island Rail Road tracks, where the road narrows considerably.

Other members wanted advance notice, claiming the lanes were painted without consulting anyone.


“The DOT is out there painting bike lanes without coming to any community,” said CB 6 Chairman Joseph Hennessy. “In fairness to the community, [the DOT] should have to bring it before the board.”

But Frank Gulluscio, district manager for the board, said the proposal is about the city and the community staying in touch.

“It’s all about communication from one agency to another,” he said. “As long as the lines are open, then you can’t say the good, the bad and the ugly.”

The proposal is not designed to be for or against the lanes.

Kamis, 17 Februari 2011

Ozone Park Company Looking to Join City's Bike Share Program by Lisa A. Fraser -Leader-Observer

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Worksman Cycles in Ozone Park has been making industrial-grade bicycles and tricycles for 112 years. And now, the company, located at 94-15 100th Street, is hoping that the city picks up their bid to be part of the Department of Transportation's new bike share program.

“All of our 112 years has been spent in New York City, our factories, our offices, so it's only the right choice for the city to work with us on this,” said Wayne Sosin, president of Worksman Cycles.

The cycle manufacturer has a history of providing bikes to various bike-share programs around the country, including Princeton's bike share program, University of Colorado's bike share program, and the University of Central Oklahoma's bike share program.

“We're the perfect resource, given our history, employment and logistics,” Sosin said.

The company has also provided bikes to the Queens Zoo, which uses their tricycles, and the Queens Botanical Garden is set to start rolling with a new batch of bikes provided by the company come spring.

The company hires locally and Sossin noted that all of his 50 employees of the factory are all New York City residents. “We're all local, they all work within a bike ride,” he said.

This local employment is another reason why Worksman Cycles hopes to be picked up by the city and it's a reason local elected officials Senator Joe Addabbo, Assemblyman Mike Miller and Councilman Eric Ulrich are promoting the company.

“I don't see why the city shouldn't choose them, it's a positive,” said Addabbo. “They're credible, they're long-withstanding, and they are a business that could do the job given their history.”

Addabbo and Sosin both stressed that it would be a benefit to the city to not only have a great program, but to say they are also using a local manufacturer. “It's an opportunity of unity, it's a good program and a good manufacturer,” Addabbo said.

If the city picks Worksman Cycles to provide the bikes for the program, it will mean a new employment opportunity for the area, something Addabbo said the neighborhood needs.

The program, which will begin in 2012, is set to require between 10,000 and 50,000 bikes and Worksman would be looking at hiring anywhere between 35 and 50 people.

Worksman Cycles is one of the oldest bike manufacturers in the country. First started in Manhattan, the company moved around Brooklyn before calling Ozone Park their new home in 1979.

Selasa, 08 Februari 2011

Cycle Maker Working to Share his Bikes with City by Lisa L. Colangelo. - NY Daily News

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A CENTURY-old bicycle manufacturer in Ozone Park is hoping city officials think locally when they seal the deal on a new bike-sharing program.


Worksman Cycles, which has built bikes for similar programs around the country, is the perfect choice for the program, said company President Wayne Sosin.
"Our bikes are reliable and durable," he said yesterday. "They are made of heavier gauge steel. We're not about light and fancy."
The Department of Transportation is soliciting proposals from companies interested in starting a bike-sharing program for a five-year period starting in 2012.
It's designed to boost alternate, environmentally friendly transportation to ease congestion and pollution around the city.
The agency did not specify how many bikes would be available but said the program should "provide secure and convenient bicycles on a 24-hour basis at a publicly accessible price."
There are no set geographic boundaries, but the city's research shows it could be successful in Manhattan, south of 60th St. And DOT officials said they would like the program to include more than one borough.
Sosin said Worksman is not equipped to run the program but would be interested in supplying bikes for the operator.
"One of the main reasons for any bike-sharing program is sustainability," said Sosin. "It's also sustainable if the bicycles come locally."
State Sen. Joseph Addabbo (D-Howard Beach) and other elected officials said they hope the city can include Worksman in the program.
"The city would be able to say it's the only one in the country to do this kind of program and keep it in-house," Addabbo said. The deadline for proposals is Feb. 16.
Worksman builds specialty cycles and heavy-duty tricycles used in factories. In recent years, keepers at the Queens Zoo ditched their powered carts for Worksman cycles, and the Queens Botanical Garden is set to start using them in the spring.