Bike parking before and after

I helped my partner move into her new office and thought I'd compare the difference in bike parking. She is a year round bicycle commuter and uses these facilities daily. Hopefully we're looking at the wave of the future.

Before: 1st Canadian Centre (BMO building)

The small windowless bike storage room is isolated on the side of the building. You access the room from the exterior with a swipe card, lock your bike to a wheel-killing floor rack, exit by the same door and access the office tower like a regular pedestrian. Bike security was very good but personal security was bad: muggers could watch you enter the storage area and wait outside to jump you on your exit. If sketchy folks were hanging around, it was a bad idea to enter the bike room at all. Tenants received reports of attacks and were urged to be alert and cautious.

After: 8th Avenue Place (Former Penny Lane)

The bike storage room is in the parkade. There is a man/bike door adjacent to the vehicle door, which is controlled with a swipe card and monitored by CCTV. Through the door you descend a ramp to the bike cage. While this ramp is roomy enough to enter and exit, it is uncomfortably narrow for bikes to pass each other in opposite directions. You enter a bike cage by using your swipe card again, which is specifically programmed for bike cage users apart from general parkade users. There is a lot of bike storage and you can lock your bike frame directly. You exit the cage through a different door on the far side and have access to male and female locker rooms. There are day use lockers available, toilets and sinks, and several showers. These facilities are maintained by the building. You exit the locker room area and access the building interior through an internal stairwell. I think this setup is really nice and I congratulate the developers at 8th Avenue Place for doing such a good job. Here are a couple of snapshots:

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Wow - that's truly impressive!

Wow - that's truly impressive! It really sets the bar for future development.

The new Cycling Strategy recommends that this sort of infrastructure be made mandatory for all new developments. We need to send these photos and your description to the City folks as an example of 'how to do it'. Great post.

BDP move

I also just moved from BMO to 8th Ave Place, recently posted my day 1 experience in "how was your ride" forum :) I too ride year round, so who did you help move?

Bike wash

Particularly for the winter months. I understand some office buildings have a bike wash / tune up room incorporated into their bike parking setup (not mine, I dream of having a secure lock up cage and locker/shower facility).

Amazing

I wonder what the landlord charges for that level of security/convenience? It would be great if that became the standard.

If i had to bet, i'd say this

If i had to bet, i'd say this IS the new standard. Developers typically wouldn't put this sort of thing at their own cost. I also heard the city recently changed bylaws regarding this sort of thing because inadequate shower facilities, etc. were a major barrier to people riding in.

Not yet

Not yet, I'm afraid. The new policy just appeared in the Cycling Strategy adopted this summer, and hasn't been implemented yet. But the plan is for the City to make it into the bylaws for the exact reasons you state above.

Count myself lucky

Aside from the dedicated ramp, that is pretty much what I have at work (on a smaller scale). We are in a fairly new 6 storey building, and we are the sole tennant. On an nice day like today, the cage is completely full. I wanted to snap a picture to send to management as a thanks and to illustrate the big healthcare savings they must be realizing for such a nice accomodation.

Best part - $0 cost to staff.

Were I to be looking for another job, I'd certainly be trying to find the equivalent or better.

Ditto

One shower for us all and I had to put bike hangers on a wall in the recieving area so we could park our gear. You guys got it good!

Nice!

Wow, that is nice! We have pretty good parking facilities in our building (TransCanada tower) but these ones certainly set a good example for others to follow.

What I like

There seems to be lots of room to park bikes. And ample showers (16 or so?). Our locker room has 4 showers, so rush hour is kinda' congested...

I'd still like to have Butler Service and a Starbuck's in there, that would be cool! HAH!

Massage Service, Tequila bar, hot tub, Olympic swimming pool, Concierge, etc. are optional (Hey, I'm just wishing for the best for U'all of my fellow riders!) HAH! X2!!