The Vanilla Workshop unveils ‘Ready-Made’ OG1 Speedvagen

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The OG1 from The Vanilla Workshop in southeast Portland is the biggest move company founder Sacha White has made yet.
(Photos: The Vanilla Workshop)

Now you can a bike designed, developed, and made in Portland from the legendary Vanilla Workshop in two weeks or less. It’s called the “OG1” and it’ll come fully-built for just over $5,000.

That’s huge news. Here’s why:

When southeast Portlander Sacha White burst onto the American framebuilding scene 16 years ago his Vanilla Bicycles were among the most coveted bikes in the world. But they were also hard to get. Because White never cut corners and believes deeply in his craft, the size of his waiting list ballooned along with his popularity. At its peak the waiting list for one of this bikes was about four years.

That inaccessibility bothered White. He’s in business to make superlative bicycles not just for the global cycling elite, but for his local friends and fellow racers. He started the Speedvagen line 10 years ago to create a more production, small-batch approach alongside his one-of-a-kind creations. He has since built Vanilla from a one-man shop to a team of builders and painters.

Now comes the OG1, built under what The Vanilla Workshop calls “the Speedvagen Ready-Made” program. Check the release below for all the details:

The Vanilla Workshop is proud to introduce the OG1 road machine, the first model in the Speedvagen Ready-Made program. With the Speedvagen Ready-Made program, you get our very best workhorse race machine – designed, built, painted and assembled in The Vanilla Workshop. Bringing a new definition of handbuilt bicycle to the market.

Speedvagen was born from a desire to keep handbuilt bikes accessible to friends and fellow racers. And with all Speedvagen up to this point being custom with a longer wait, this marks a return to the company’s roots with a bike that represents the core of the Speedvagen ethos of attainability. The OG1 (Original Gangster) is a beautiful, minimalist, bombproof race machine with a great ride. Each OG1 is meticulously built by hand at the Vanilla Workshop in Portland, OR.

OG1 frames are produced in small batches, keeping the cost down, while offering riders a truly hand built experience without waiting months or even years for a bike. Our goal is to have a bikes delivered within 2 weeks of ordering.

Highlights:

  • 5 standard sizes ranging from 50 to 58 (50,52,54,56,58).
  • 2 iconic color options – Matte Army & Matte Lavender.
  • Painted in house, utilizing Speedvagen Ghost graphics.
  • Berzerker dropouts.
  • Integrated seatmast.
  • Super light custom drawn steel tubing. (Columbus and True Temper)
  • Strategically placed stainless steel reinforcements.

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The OG1 component package has been selected for great function, shredability and longevity. You’ll notice a mix of Dura Ace and Ultegra – an old racer’s secret (performance where it matters and economy where it counts) as well as a nice lightweight year-round set of Mavic wheels. Here’s the full spec:

  • Shimano Dura Ace mechanical shifters and rear derailleur.
  • Shimano Ultegra front derailleur, cranks and brakes.
  • Mavic Ksyrium Elite wheels & tires.
  • Fizik Antares saddle.
  • PRO handlebar wrapped in Cinelli cork tape.
  • Ritchey seatpost head & painted PRO PLT stem.
  • Painted ENVE 2.0 road fork.

To deliver a bike of this quality within two weeks is a absolutely huge accomplishment. Congrats and good luck with the OG1 to Sacha and the entire Workshop crew!

– Read more local bike industry news in the Industry Ticker archives.

— Jonathan Maus, (503) 706-8804 – jonathan@bikeportland.org

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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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bikeninja
bikeninja
7 years ago

An important detail left out of the story is if any of the sizing is customized by the new owner at the time of purchase. Most importantly is the integrated seat mast cut to length to fit the new owner before painting.

Bjorn
Bjorn
7 years ago
Reply to  bikeninja

the seat height looks to be adjustable in the photo.

Otis
Otis
7 years ago
Reply to  bikeninja

Almost certain all final adjustments are made per customer spec (fork steer tube length, seat mast height) before painting.

Jim Lee
Jim Lee
7 years ago

The old Schwinn catalogs always pictured their wares with wheels rotated to place stems exactly at the bottom.

Very nice touch.

Lester Burnham
Lester Burnham
7 years ago

Ya Vanilla!!! Could shred on this!

Jason Skelton
Jason Skelton
7 years ago

I may have found my midlife crisis bike.

dan
dan
7 years ago

Is there a performance difference between these bikes and your garden variety TreSpecialDale? Or is it more about the appeal of artisanal/local product?

Pat Lowell
Pat Lowell
7 years ago
Reply to  dan

It’s a pretty bike, but not sure I’d pay $5K+ for it when you can get a custom C*M*ti*n for that price. Guess it depends how much you value the Portland hipster cool factor.

Champs
Champs
7 years ago
Reply to  dan

If you’ve ever given your bike a thorough cleaning, you might notice how that next ride feels amazing. There’s no objective reason for it, but it’s there. Riding a Vanilla is like that all the time.

bendite
bendite
7 years ago
Reply to  dan

If you’ve been on a handmade bike you’d have your answer, and it’s yes.

Huey Lewis
Huey Lewis
7 years ago

Does DJ OG1 know about this?

Jessica Roberts
7 years ago

Another great build by Sacha. Love it.

Brian
Brian
7 years ago

Such a beautiful bike. Nice work, Team Vanilla.

intjonathan
intjonathan
7 years ago

I think you accidentally a word: “Now you can a bike…”

dwk
dwk
7 years ago

Pretty average wheels for a 5 grand bike….

Rain Waters
Rain Waters
7 years ago

Wonderful news!

My similarly equipped carbon frame with over 50k miles on it, (that will NEVER rust), rides better than snob-tank and cleans up with clearcoat.

Making it worth $10,000 at least !

I’m slowly recovering from denial of “potential catastrophic failure”. I hope I make it through this ordeal with my life.

That shade of purple sez all I need to know.

RW

soren
7 years ago
Reply to  Rain Waters

riding carbon has saved me a lot of money since i no longer break a metal frame every 2-3 years.

paikiala
paikiala
7 years ago

Which group does this bike appeal to?
the 1%?

middle of the road guy
middle of the road guy
7 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

Or just people with different tastes and sensibilities than you.

Some people spend a bunch of money on weed…I spend mine on bikes.

dwk
dwk
7 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

Silly comment… I have already stated that the wheels are average for the price, but $5,000 for very nice dependable transportation that will last years is not a 1% item. I spend 10-15 hours a week on a bicycle, way more than a car and I won very nice expensive bikes for that reason.
Very cheap compared to cars even if you own a very expensive bike.

Brian
Brian
7 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

I don’t understand this question. My guess it appeals to most everyone who enjoys quality road bikes.

bendite
bendite
7 years ago
Reply to  Brian

Most car owners spend more than that on their car in a year, does that make them part of the 1%?

B. Carfree
B. Carfree
7 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

Weird question, imo. My family hasn’t even been in the middle class for decades (thank goodness for Obamacare!), but we own several custom bicycles that cost more than $5k. We haven’t owned a working car for many years, so maybe that’s part of it. When your bike is what gets you from point A to point B, it better be well-made, especially when those two points may well be hundreds of miles apart at times.

The average car owner spends $2-4k on gasoline per year and over $5k on car expenses each year. It doesn’t take many years of avoiding those expenses to have plenty of funds for those things one places value in.

Lower income yet privileged Speedvagen owner
Lower income yet privileged Speedvagen owner
7 years ago
Reply to  paikiala

It appeals to the “interested” as opposed to “concerned” group.

Chris I
Chris I
7 years ago

58cm is the biggest option? I guess they don’t have any customers over 6′ tall…

BB
BB
7 years ago
Reply to  Chris I

If you’re over 6′ you’re already too heavy for these bikes.

IanC
IanC
7 years ago

Wow – all the dissing and judgement over the price.

I’m a musician. My feeling is that you can’t spend “too much” on an instrument IF…
1. It speaks to you and fits your style
2. You’re going to play it.

It’s the same thing with a 5K bike. If it fits your style and passions AND you’re going to ride the Hell out of it – just go for it! It’s worth it.

Brian
Brian
7 years ago
Reply to  IanC

It’s the Portland way.

Mossby Pomegranate
Mossby Pomegranate
7 years ago
Reply to  Brian

The same people who complain about a fine local-built Vanilla probably have an expensive foreign-built iPhone in their pocket.

Chris I
Chris I
7 years ago

And what local-built smartphone are you using?

Kevin Wagoner
Kevin Wagoner
7 years ago
Reply to  IanC

This is great. I’m totally using this quote while I convince my wife I do really need at least one of these bikes.

GlowBoy
GlowBoy
7 years ago

Nothing wrong with spending $5000 on a bike, but you can get a comparably performant bike for quite a lot less. Of course it won’t be a Vanilla, and if that’s important to you (as it’s important to some car owners to flash the BMW kidneys or the Audi rings around town) then have at it.

FWIW, I own a handbuilt-in-Oregon bike that cost me about half that much.

dan
dan
7 years ago

I wonder a little bit about “handbuilt”. Aren’t they all? Even the Taiwanese factories aren’t using robot welding…are they? And carbon fiber is laid up by hand…isn’t it? And if it was available, wouldn’t perfectly consistent robot welding be a better product with tighter tolerances than what a inconsistent flesh organism can produce?

Eric Leifsdad
Eric Leifsdad
7 years ago

What about the matching fenders?

Drew
Drew
7 years ago

Frame is steel; fork is an off the shelf carbon unit. Lots of frame builders don’t seem to want to build steel forks any more.

wsbob
wsbob
7 years ago

So this bike is designed with serious racers in mind? Which I’m not. Sloping top tube bikes are ok, but for a hand built bike, I prefer the look of a level top tube. Hand built lugged tubing joints can be a beautiful sight to behold. This bike’s tubing appears to be filet brazed, which, done well, also can be very good looking (Klein, Cannondale, old Schwinn Super Sport); if I saw the bike first hand, I’d be looking to see how White finished the bike’s tube joints.

Not personally keen on forks like this one has, with less steep angle, eliminating the slight curve at the tips…but it probably appeals to lots of people that want to get away from suggestion of a traditional styled and designed bike.

The re curve seat stays are kind of sweet. I like them. The lilac color is unusual, not bad.

Glad there are local people with the passion to try produce and make available, something showing an effort to strive for extraordinary heights of aesthetics and craftsmanship. That kind of initiative is worth supporting. I don’t have the bucks, or the need for this type of bike, but there likely are quite a number of people that have both.

I think it’s true that the kind of investment this bike represents, isn’t necessary for becoming an excellent, skilled, and very fast rider. Plenty of bikes for sale new, down from retail for 1000 or less, that will more than do the job…but they’re not hand built like this one.

One of my fond memories…some guy on work assignment here from Germany, wanted to ride with a local tour club, picked up some old poc Schwinn Continental. He was in fairly good shape, though not extraordinarily so. Over long distance, steep climbs and descents, he did easily better than average among people riding much more sophisticated, expensive bikes.