Dallas Unveils World's Saddest Bike Sharing Program

FairParkBikeShare.jpg
Eric Nicholson
On Thursday afternoon, a dozen or so journalists stood in an awkward semi-circle near the Women's Museum at Fair Park, gazing at Dallas' first bike-share station. They had been promised that Mayor Mike Rawlings would be there at 3:30 p.m. to take the inaugural ride on one of the gleaming blue bicycles arrayed on the docking station before them, but the designated time had come and gone with no sign of the mayor. Dallas park director Willis Winters, the only punctual city official, stood on the fringe checking his email and looking not particularly eager to steal the show.

The reporters waited, grousing idly about the temperature, which hovered in the mid-30s. And they waited some more. Initially, the bike-share program at Fair Park was scheduled to go live early last summer, when it was still warm. But delays, including objections from the Dallas Landmark Commission over the location of one of the docking stations, delayed the unveiling to the fall, and the State Fair precluded an October debut. Hence the launch on the day of the season's first freeze.

See also: After Delays, Fair Park Bike Share Will Be Ready by September. Or Maybe November.

The Feast of Sharing happening on the far end of the Esplanade provided a steady trickle of passersby to cast befuddled glances at the row of shiny new bikes and the reporters and cameramen who were staring at it. A few paused to satisfy their curiosity.

One guy in a red vinyl jacket and a Jumpman hat tried to process the purpose of the bikes. So you pay money to rent a bike -- $5 for the first 30 minutes, $2.50 for every half hour after that -- and then, because Dallas' only other bike share station is right next to the Texas Discovery Gardens, you just ride it around Fair Park? "That's crazy," he muttered, clearly at a loss to divine what anyone could possibly want to see at Fair Park.

At 3:54 p.m., as reporters were starting to mutter about hazard pay, there was an excited announcement from one of the Fair Park staffers who had recently arrived: The eagle was aloft and would alight at approximately 4 o'clock. Like clockwork, a Chevy Suburban, presumably heated, pulled to a stop and disgorged the mayor and City Councilwoman Carolyn Davis.

RawlingsBikeShare.jpg

"It's a beautiful day for a bike ride, guys!" Rawlings gushed as he strode buoyantly toward a waiting bike. He was wobbly for his first few feet -- it was his first time on a bike since hip surgery, he explained later -- but hit his stride during a quick down-and-back to the Fair Park fountain.

The sight of Dallas' highest elected official pedaling gleefully in front of a gaggle of reporters was irresistible. "Hey! Mayor Rawlings! You still got it, my man!" a man shouted, rushing over to shake his hand.

Dismounting, Rawlings said it had been an uncommonly smooth ride and declared the he might bring Mickey Micki, his wife, to Fair Park during Thanksgiving.

"I was just in London, and these were all over the place," he said. As if to head off critics who have complained that the new Fair Park-only system, with two stations that are essentially in the same place, is a perversion of the basic concept of bike-share, i.e. a practical network of stations that people can use to travel from point a to point b, he continued. "We want them all over Dallas, but this is the perfect place to start."

Fair Park, which is all but deserted for 11 months of the year, almost certainly isn't the perfect place to start, but Rawlings gave his best sales pitch. The bikes are nice, sturdy, made to last. "I can take this to go get a pizza?" he asked Friends of Fair Park Director Craig Holcomb, nodding toward the Pizza Lounge across Grand Avenue. Why he would pay $5 to cover a quarter mile that, given the DART tracks and multiple lanes of Grand Avenue traffic that would have to be traversed, would be much easier to walk? That question wasn't answered. The point was riders are allowed to take the bikes off of Fair Park property, even onto the DART train, Holcomb says, so long as one doesn't mind adding the cost of a train ticket to the bike-share charges being racked up on one's credit card every half hour until the bike's returned to Fair Park.

Rawlings even put a positive spin on the near-freezing unveiling, explaining that his time in the restaurant business taught him the benefit of a "soft opening" to work out kinks and build excitement. You "don't launch on Labor Day," he said. "This is the perfect time."

And just in case the car-loving, cold-hating Dallas public doesn't agree, Holcomb announced that the first half-hour will be just $2.50 through January 1. So really there's no excuse not to drive down to Fair Park and ride a rented bike through the sprawling Art Deco complex, except that it costs money, is at Fair Park, and is really kind of pointless.

Send your story tips to the author, Eric Nicholson.


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123 comments
AustinBaze
AustinBaze

Darn.  If only there were a nearby city to use as an example of how to actually do this.  


Can anyone supply a map and directions to Fort Worth (35 stations, 300 bikes)?  Or Austin? (400+ bikes, 45 stations all over downtown, some near landmarks, more than 100,000 rides in the first 10 months, 17,000 bikes checked out during the 10 days around the ACL Festival).  And can someone buy the mayor a watch?  

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter

Do you really expect real Texas manly men to ride a girls bike?

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter

Those trees would be great perches for some yutes with paint guns.

ut8t5
ut8t5

why would I rent a bike when i can buy a used one on craigslist for $15

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

but but but....how do the gays and lesbians feel about this....and is there diversity in ridership or disparate punishment for failure to pay?  what about discrimination against tricycles and skateboards?  who makes these bikes, the Chinese...how much did John Wiley get for these and did Cathy Neeley have anything to do with the contracts? How does D.A. Watkins feel about this, and when do the bike riots and looting start?

sure2win
sure2win

I don't even know how this is suppose to work with 2 rental/return stations.  If a station is filled with bikes then you cannot return your current rental because there is won't be an open a dock station for it.  So if you rent a bike at the Women's Museum, ride it over to Discovery Gardens and there isn't an open dock, you have to ride it back to the Women's Museum to return it....which would defeat the purpose of renting the bike to ride over there in the first place and be a waste of time and money.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

What happens when your rented bike gets stolen while you're getting a triple-shot double latte kopi luwak at Staryucks?

jmbindustriesllc
jmbindustriesllc

The taxpayers spend $125,000 for 15 - 20 bicycles to increase daily activity at Fair Park.  This appears to be another government program that has not been clearly thought out.  I could understand if the bicycles were available for rent to ride on bike trails in a large state park.  If priced reasonably, that might tempt people to visit those parks who otherwise would not or could not walk miles of scenic trails.  But, I don't understand how having these bikes available at Fair Park is going to encourage people to get in their car and drive the family to visit this park.  Having concerts or other types of draws would seem to be more effective at increasing Fair Park attendance. 


It never ceases to amaze me how government officials spend other people's money.  I wonder if the "Friends of Fair Park" has any political ties to the administration because oftentimes one just has to follow the money to identify the real motives behind studies or programs funded by taxpayer dollars.  Time will tell whether this has been a good investment or waste of time, money, and effort.

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

where are the rental Tesla autos then?

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

when does Richardson get its Ricksha rides implemented for the Asian non-bikers?

parvathi.09876
parvathi.09876

Hey, that sounds great. I'll definitely go and borrow a bike and ride around Fair Park. I guess the article has to be sarcastic and snarky because it's the Observer (?)

dfw_maverick
dfw_maverick

Seems to me bike rentals would get a lot of use around DART rail stations in downtown - Put the bikes where the folks are

rtwjr
rtwjr

What a great and funny article. it has something for everyone. Ha Ha Ha. Thank you.


GoodGrief
GoodGrief

I ride my bike all the time and I wear a helmet. It is the smart thing to do. I know people who have sustained serious brain injuries when they fell off a bike. Mayor without a helmet says not to bright Mayor. Allowing himself to be part of this particular travesty also says someone who doesn't think before he decides to participate in an event. 

Catbird
Catbird

Soon there will be blue bicycles pulling red Target shopping carts in every neighborhood between the Trinity and I30.

BenS.
BenS.

It's a great moment for Dallas seeing this come into being. In order to get these rental facilities in place, the draconian and misguided Bicycle Helmet Ordinance had to be repealed. Parts of the ordinance required bike rental facilities to provide a helmet to every renter. That could never happen at a self service facility.


The payoff is that Dallas becomes a far more bike friendly city with restrictions removed on adults wearing helmets while riding bikes. It was a terrible ordinance and is gone solely as a result of these bike share facilities.


Seeing a Mayor of Dallas riding a bike without a helmet on is a great moment. An awesome moment.

sleepyhead420
sleepyhead420

Okay, lets summarize people. Fair Park is open year-round. There are events there year-round. There is a Women's Museum and a popular memorial at the front. There are popular museums in between. There is a restaurant. There is a radio station. It is a fun place to ride even if you don't do any of the above. Here is a concept for your (most of you it looks like) feeble brain. Ride the train to Fair Park. Get off the train. Get on a bike. Ride it to the Discovery Gardens. Walk to the Dave Matthews show. Repeat in reverse. Any questions?

ozonelarryb
ozonelarryb

So where's the vid of our intrepid leader braving the elements on the bike?

pgrove1704
pgrove1704

The comments here are from non bike riders obviously. 1) The Santa Fe Bike Trail starts near fair park and I've taken the Bike Trail system from Fair Park to George Bush in Plano All without ever having to ride on the street. 2) The bike lanes also start near Fair Park and can be taken through Downtown and over into North Oak Cliff/Bishop Arts.


The idea is great for people who are out and about and just want to do something outside (for a change) Yeah this isn't the best weather for it, but just wait; this is Texas after all.

choderus
choderus

It says in the story that this way is better. By starting off the program with virtually no usage, they eliminate all the problems that come with a total lack of preparedness (see DART Green Line's first Texas/OU game day disaster).

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@GoodGrief

The elimination of helmet requirements for adults is a GOTV effort by the democrat party.

Allan
Allan

@BenS. That ordinance only applies to riders under 18.

DallasTries
DallasTries

@sleepyhead420 One more question for your superior intelligence to address...what is the point of riding a bike to a radio station?  Do you press your addled brain against the outside wall hoping for a better signal?

DallasTries
DallasTries

@sleepyhead420 Yes, one question.  Did you mean to summarize people, or did you mean to inform people that you are going to summarize?

whareagle
whareagle

@sleepyhead420 Um, the Women's Museum's been closed for years. The Rail Museum is gone. The science museum is gone... Most of it is boarded up most of the year. Sorry, but they blew it putting those bikes in that location....

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

@ozonelarryb I like Obama riding the girl's bicycle in his mommy jeans with the industrial grade crash helmet while eating an ice cream cone and drinking a beer with his hot dog.

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

@pgrove1704 anything without a motor on it and pretending to be used for transportation is just anti-Marcan.

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

@pgrove1704 non-bikers pay taxes.  bikers should just stay in East Dallas where they belong

harry3w2003
harry3w2003

@pgrove1704

I am a cyclist and there is no way to ride a bike from Santa Fe to George Bush in Plano without getting on a street unless you rode on the sidewalk around Coit and Spring Valley. 

buckbucky
buckbucky

No pudgy tourist is going to ride one of these clunky tanks all the way to Plano let alone down the Santa fe.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

Wow, who makes the bikes, Porsche?

ozonelarryb
ozonelarryb

Roof, you on a bike would be a non sequitour.

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

@buckbucky The pudgy tourists are on the Segway tours of downtown anyway.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@rufuslevin

Twenty-seven dollars is almost enough to buy a used Carrera.

rufuslevin
rufuslevin

@ozonelarryb When I was a kid and took Boys Life magazine, they always had ads for a "Bike Supporter"...heck, I was too young to know about jock straps....but I asked my mom to buy me one because I was a bike supporter and rode mine all over town.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@rufuslevin

can they park themselves unattended?

That technology has been around since the dawn of the bicycle age.

Simply dismount and release grip on handlebars, the bike will park itself every time.

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