7 things Toronto should know about Bixi

  • A Bixi rider covered the seat for the next user on a damp Montreal day. (Nov. 30, 2009)
    adrimcm via Flickr (http://bit.ly/dAf4sF)
  • A row of Bixi bikes for hire in Montreal. (May 22, 2009)
    yawper via Flickr (http://bit.ly/9UGKud)
  • An empty Bixi stand in Montreal. (Nov. 7, 2009)
    jbcurio via Flickr (http://bit.ly/cYs7qD)
  • One of Montreal's Bixi machines. (Nov. 7, 2009)
    jbcurio via Flickr (http://bit.ly/a43P4X)
  • The Bixi logo on a Montreal subscriber's key. (April 17, 2010)
    newton64 via Flickr (http://bit.ly/9IzJJM)
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Montrealers were skeptical about the oddly named, peculiar-looking bikes that started popping up at futuristic solar-powered docking stations a year ago.

Who on earth is going to rent all those bikes — 2,400 of them? And the cost: a three-hour ride will cost how much — $22.50, plus a subscription fee?!

Soon enough, though, Montrealers got Bixi, which rhymes with Dixie and is a contraction of bike and taxi. They fell in love with the bike-sharing concept already popular in European cities such as Paris — so much so that 2,600 more bikes were soon added to the network.

By the time the last Bixi was trucked away for winter in November, 1.1 million rides had been taken and more than 10,000 people had signed up for subscriptions.

Now, it's Toronto's turn.

The city inked a deal with the Montreal company behind Bixi to create a 1,000-bike system in Toronto, launching in May 2011. Before Toronto, London, Boston, Melbourne and Minneapolis had adopted Bixi.

Here are seven things Torontonians need to know:

  1. It's about frequent short trips, hence the pricing. Toronto fees are expected to be the same or similar to Montreal's, where subscriptions cost $78 for one year, $28 for one month and $5 for one day. After that, there are usage fees to consider. The first 30 minutes of every ride is free. After that, the next 30 minutes cost $1.50. The following half hour costs $3. And every subsequent half hour sets you back $6. But very few users ever reach that point. Bixi is not for sightseeing. It's for getting from Point A to Point B. A survey shows half of Montreal users jump on Bixis to get to and from work or school. Some are taking lunchtime jaunts or using Bixi to meet friends across town or as an alternative to the bus when they get off the subway.
  2. You might not be able to return your bike at the first self-serve docking station you visit. It might be full. Don't panic. You'll be given 15 minutes of free time to reach another one. And stations are on average only 300 metres apart. A smart phone will help; you can check bike-dock availability online. In Montreal, this summer, some stations are filling up so quickly on weekday mornings that three "depot stations" were opened where commuters can hand bikes over to Bixi employees without the need to bother with a docking station.
  3. Bike-sharing services typically focus on densely populated areas that feature offices, shopping and cultural venues. In Montreal, stations are concentrated downtown and adjacent neighbourhoods to the east such as Plateau Mont Royal. Almost three-quarters of Montreal Bixi users live in the area covered by the service.
  4. The specially designed Bixi bikes are sleek and distinctive. They have sturdy tires, internal brakes, a covered chain to protect your clothes, an integrated basket with an elasticized cord and always-on front and back lights. But the bikes are heavy and hills have been a problem, as the original Bixi only had three gears. A new version with seven speeds is being tested.
  5. It can be addictive. In Bixi's first year in Montreal, one rider — the system's most active user — took 853 trips. That's an average of more than four trips per day. (Bixi was up and running for 200 days in 2009.)
  6. Motorists will grumble about bike-sharing, calling it a folly and a waste of tax dollars and complaining that bikes are taking up too much space on roads. (Not to mention all those on-street parking spots the docking stations eat up.) But after so many years as king of the city, cars are just going to have to make some room.
  7.  If Montreal is any indication, within weeks, the bikes and docking stations will become an appealing part of Toronto's urban landscape. And people who never considered cycling downtown will find themselves lured by the prospect of experiencing their city in a new way.

Do you need Bixi in your neighbourhood? Where should Toronto's bike-share docking stations be set up? Let us know in the comments below.

Andy Riga is the transportation reporter and city blogger at The Gazette in Montreal. He'll celebrate his first year as a Bixi user on May 25. You can read his Gazette blog, Metropolitan News, at http://www.montrealgazette.com/metnews.

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COMMENTS

Cindy Fan's picture
Cindy Fan wrote 5 weeks 12 hours ago

Have heard/ grumblings through twitter that the unveiled Toronto bixi network that they will launch with covers a ridiculously small area. I'm trying desperately to find the map of bixi stations, but no luck! Can't find it.

Kathy Vey's picture
Kathy Vey wrote 5 weeks 10 hours ago

The initial Bixi service area is from Spadina to Jarvis, south of Bloor. Here's a photo that @gaz2002 took at last night's launch party at the Gladstone Hotel.

They haven't announced locations for the Bixi stations yet, but I'm guessing they'll be near Yonge-University subway stops if this tweet from TTC chair Adam Giambrone is any hint.

 
sully wrote 5 weeks 1 day ago

Good article. I've only partially been paying attention to the development of this program in Toronto - do we know where the first set of docking stations will be located?

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