Tuscani01
Senior Member
Montreal's Bixi team also opens up special drop off points when racks are full. You bring the bike to a Bixi rep, who then has the bikes redistributed.
On a daily basis? Moving them back to the suburbs mid-morning, and then back to downtown mid-afternoon?Montreal has several teams driving pickups moving bikes from over-full stations to empty ones.
Zipcar solution to crowding would be to credit your account with free riding time if you go out of your way to find an empty spot at a nearby dock. Their system is so fully stacked with incentives that it largely runs itself.
On a daily basis? Moving them back to the suburbs mid-morning, and then back to downtown mid-afternoon?
Interesting responses to my commuter hoarding question.
At the end of the day though, I still don't understand how it's possible for Bixi to work. Car sharing makes sense because you spend a few hundred dollars a year to save tens of thousands on the purchase price of a car, plus thousands on annual expenses. For bike sharing, you spend one or two hundred dollars a year to avoid buying a really cheap beater bike. Why not just buy the bike?
For even a light user, Bixi makes no financial sense (the security deposit alone is far more expensive than a cheap bike!!). Financially speaking, it's the equivalent of Zipcar charging a $30,000 security deposit to rent a car. The risk would be too high - what intelligent person would actually use the service?