Industry Ticker: Norther’s Klickitat, limited edition Breadwinner, and Western Bikeworks big remodel

The latest from Norther, Western Bikeworks, and Breadwinner.
(Photos by Anthony Bareno (left), Western Bikeworks (middle), Breadwinner Cycles (right).

Portland’s local bike industry is always in flux: coming, going, making it, and breaking it. Because business is a key part of our local scene, we try to keep an eye on it all. Here are three bits of news from local makers and sellers that you should know about.

Norther’s new Klickitat Pass

The Klickitat Pass from Norther Cycles.
(Photo by Anthony Bareno)

I love Norther Cycles. Starmichael Bowman and Mark Simmons have come together to create something special on North Albina just north of Killingsworth Avenue. They can make and fix anything (their shop is like Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory for bike nerds) and they specialize in bicycles built for reliable rambling with an aesthetic that’s classic yet modern and functional. I always say that to make it in bike retail in Portland, you’ve got to bring something distinctive to the table, and Norther does that as well as anyone.

(Photo by Anthony Bareno)

With the shop on solid ground, Norther is flexing its bike-making muscle. Their new Klickitat Pass adventure/sport touring frameset is an exciting step forward. The bike is built right in the shop and is being offered on a limited basis. Only 10 will be made and there are three sizes; 54, 56, and 58 cm. The price is $2,000. Add $200 for a dynamo hub wired up to power a front and rear light.

Here’s the verbage on the bike:

The Klickitat is not a pared down ultra light race bike with the tightest geometry ever. Because it’s not meant to be the lightest fasted bike ever, just light and fast enough to fall in love with. It doesn’t have five thousand braze ons, so it can be way overloaded. It has just enough for smart set ups.

As for the great debate on tubing sizes and wall thickness the Klickitat is right in the middle. It doesn’t use the scary lightest frame tubes available. Because that would be a huge mistake as it would be to light duty for most people and situations, and it would dent up to easy. We also didn’t use the heaviest tubes ever because we want it to still ride awesome and be fun even when it’s not fully loaded down. Could we go smaller and lighter, yes! Would it make sense for us, or any small batch builder to do that, no! I’m constantly interviewing people about their bike and how they feel about it and almost no one feels like there bike is to heavy duty or dead feeling, but man if a bike is two [sic] light and flexi people describe it as scary, and usually end up selling their bikes pretty quickly.

We don’t believe in this. We want people to love our bikes. We want you to reach for your Klickitat 9 times out of 10 no matter how many bikes you have to choose from.

Learn more and reserve yours at NortherCycles.com.

Breadwinner’s W/// Sport Lolo

The limited edition Lolo Sport from Breadwinner.
(Photo: Dylan VanWeelden)

Another north Portland-based bike maker, Breadwinner Cycles, has a limited edition bike that is unabashedly about going fast. Tony Pereira and Ira Ryan have put together a racier version of their Lolo road bike that’s only available until May 5th. It comes with the option of three SRAM-oriented parts builds, a “motorsport inspired” paint job, and a special wool jersey (also made in Portland!) by ANTHM Collective. The price is $6,890.

(Photo: Dylan VanWeelden)

Here’s the official word:

Our award-winning, custom fit steel Lolo frame paired with Enve fork, thru-axles, disc brakes, optional Ritchey Solostreem bar/stem, and striking motorsport-inspired paint scheme–all with three special parts packages that will suit every discerning rider.

Now through May 5th, the limited edition thru axle Lolo is available with three SRAM gruppos to choose from, carbon wheel upgrades and the option of a custom painted Ritchey Solostreem bar/stem combo.

Mixing ultra-light and responsive Columbus Life tubing with decades of road racing and riding pedigree, the Lolo was made to dance up mountains and carve twisty descents. This smooth riding, light steel tubing is TIG welded with precision and fitted with an Enve carbon fork, resulting in a impeccable performance machine. A modern road bike in design and style, with sloping top tube and double oversize tubing, the Lolo is a fast and responsive road racer that flies and feels great all day long.

Get yours and learn more at BreadwinnerCycles.com.

Advertisement

Western Bikeworks revamps NW Portland store

A new look inside.

Western Bikeworks is one of Portland’s largest bike shops. But the 10,000 square feet of their NW Lovejoy and 17th Avenue store was a bit overwhelming for some customers and a fresh layout was needed. According to Bicycle Retailer & Industry News, the shop hired a consultant and has completed a major update to the interior.

Here’s more from BRAIN:

The remodel included carving out a triathlon-specific zone to house tri apparel, accessories, wetsuits and a complete offering of tri bikes. The tri section is located right near the bike fit area, so that high-end triathletes can easily dial in their perfect bike fit. Western Bikeworks recently acquired rights to triathlon retailer The Athlete’s Lounge’s name and customer base after it closed in 2016.

“This was an exciting project for us to work on, as Portland has some of the best retail stores in the country. This shop suffered from many of the same challenges that typical shops deal with; confusing sightlines, overwhelming bike presentation, uninspiring apparel sections and lack of signage or graphics,” said 3 Dots Design owner Holly Wiese.

“I think customers will be very pleasantly surprised with the new vibe and layout of the store, and I’m confident that Western Bikeworks will start selling more product as well,” Wiese added.

As always, if you work in the local bike industry and have a story you’d like to share here (or even off the record, we do that too), please drop me a line. For more local, bite-sized bike news posts, browse our Industry Ticker archives.

— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org

BikePortland is supported by the community (that means you!). Please become a subscriber or make a donation today.

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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Adam
6 years ago

$X.00 for a ? Who is going to pay for that when you can get for much cheaper??

Adam
6 years ago
Reply to  Adam

This was supposed to be a joke but the formatting got messed up. 😛

That Klickitat does look like a nice bike though.

Middle of the Road Guy
Middle of the Road Guy
6 years ago
Reply to  Adam

that Breadwinner looks amazing. $6800, while expensive, is pretty fair for a US-made high end custom bike.

My Vanilla slightly more…9 years ago.

Dan A
Dan A
6 years ago
Reply to  Adam

I’m holding out for a Magna adventure bike, ’cause I want a REAL adventure.

Lester Burnham
Lester Burnham
6 years ago

BP community in general seems to have a lot of hate towards bikes costing this much. But the Norther looks pretty useful right out of the box.

bikeninja
bikeninja
6 years ago

The Norther looks like a great Classic bike. Traditional lugged steel frames like this are not availible from mass production builders anymore, and this looks like a nice frame at a fair price.

John Liu
John Liu
6 years ago

Norther are fantastic folks. I’ve watched their frames being built and the quality is excellent. That Lolo looks slick and fast too!

I wanted to mention that many local framebuilders – including hopefully Norther and Breadwinner? – will be showing frames and bikes, and hanging out over beers, at Velocult’s Modern Custom Day on June 4. This will be similar to the Modern Custom Day we did last fall.

Custom means builders who make custom, semi custom, or really limited production bikes from custom builders; the two bikes featured here would certainly qualify.

Modern means builders who are still taking orders, as opposed to the great framebuilders of yesteryear. If you want to see the latter, come to Classic and Vintage day on June 3.

We’re incredibly lucky to live in a city with so much local frame building talent and creativity. More info in the Pedalpalooza calendar.

BrianC
BrianC
6 years ago

I had a chance to view the Klickitat in the Norther Cycles shop on Saturday. It’s a really nice bike.

It was fun to check the shop out and see what they were doing.