Portland company will operate largest bike-share system in U.S.

SmartBike DC-5

A SmartBikeDC kiosk in D.C.
(Photos © J. Maus)

Alta Bicycle Share, sister company of Portland-based Alta Planning + Design, will operate the largest bike-sharing system in the United States when Washington D.C. expands their SmartBikeDC program into Arlington, Virginia later this year.

Plans announced today by D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty and other regional officials say the system will launch with roughly 1100 bikes at 114 stations. D.C. was the first city in America to test the bike-sharing waters when they opened a few kiosks in April 2008.

City of Portland bike sharing demonstration-22

The D.C./Arlington system will be based on BIXI.

Alta Bicycle Share will oversee the system, assisting in permitting, funding strategies, program management, kiosk design and location analysis, and more. The D.C./Arlington system (which doesn’t have a name yet, but has a survey to help choose one) will be based on the heralded BIXI system from Montreal.

This news comes just a few weeks after Denver launched a large-scale bike-share system and Minneapolis is also close to launching one. Portland was once very keen on bike-sharing, but — despite the hometown expertise of Alta and a lot of effort to find a suitable vendor — City Hall currently has no plans to move forward.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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hanmade
hanmade
13 years ago

I am going there in June and am planning on trying their system to ride around the mall.

memo
memo
13 years ago

hanmade, start looking into it early. I tried into a bike share in DC about a year back when Clear Channel was running the program and eventually gave up after all the hoops. Hopefully Alta is not just for DC area residents….Best of luck and please let us know how it goes.

Red Five
Red Five
13 years ago

Please don’t force me to subsidize this as well.

bikieboy
bikieboy
13 years ago

memo, seems like the DC system run by Clear Channel was intentionally not geared to serve tourists — which to me was a huge oversight, since the most practical and enjoyable way to tour the Capitol Mall is by bike.

Todd Boulanger
Todd Boulanger
13 years ago

As for a system name…How about “District” + “Bixi” = “Dixie”?!

Todd Boulanger
Todd Boulanger
13 years ago

Huh I took the survey but sadly the Survey Monkey page did not show how the votes were going after their thank you note…the page just left me in a white out without a way to leave the site…odd

Chris Rall
Chris Rall
13 years ago

The Bike Station at Union Station has bike rentals that work for tourists, but this could be a good deal for short trips noodling around if you are in DC more than once per year. I might give it a try too.

Paul Tay
Paul Tay
13 years ago

When I was car-bound in D.C., I might have used bikeshare, if there was a way to also roll a toddler.

ayresjk
ayresjk
13 years ago

I was there a few weeks ago and spoke with the head of the program…its $40 for an annual subscription and yes it is geared towards locals, not tourists, which made me upset at first, but talking to the guy, I realized that it’s intention is to reduce in-city car trips. Have a long lunch to kill? hop on Metro and ride a few stops, get off and ride a bike to get your hair cut, ride back and return the bike. its a great idea, that could get over run and abused by tourists. I rented bikes from the rental place at Union Station and was very pleased with that outfit. $15 for two hours, a lock and a Helmet. A few bucks more for the whole day or a sportier bike.