BikeLoud wants to boost DIY bike lane sweeping effort

Portland’s grassroots response to the challenging problem of leaves in bike lanes continues to evolve. At a virtual meeting hosted by a local bike advocacy group tomorrow, folks will come together to brainstorm new ways to scale up the effort.

BikeLoud PDX is organizing the meeting and it comes after years of testing ways of empowering local cyclists to pick up leaves, gravel, and other debris themselves. While the City of Portland has improved their response to the annual slippery mess in recent years by purchasing smaller sweepers and investing in the staff to operate them, there are simply too many leaves for city workers to clean up. And the annual Leaf Day Pickup program has made the problem even more acute as hundreds of property owners intentionally blow and rake leaves into bike lanes in advance of pickup by city crews (despite education efforts by the transportation bureau).

To combat the problem, Portlanders have begun sweeping lanes themselves — and the technology and ingenuity have advanced considerably in the past few years. In 2018 BikePortland shared one local man’s invention that attached several swiveling brooms onto a bike trailer. It was a valiant prototype, but something with more sweeping power was needed.

Then in 2022 I highlighted an invention from Californian Pierre Lermant. He’d just completed a working prototype of his Bike Lane Sweeper product and he reached out to BikePortland to see if any local groups wanted to test one out. BikeLoud answered the call.

Fast forward three years and BikeLoud has worked closely with Lermant (and his partner Cedric Everleigh) to help push the design of the Bike Lane Sweeper forward. BikeLoud also loans out the sweeper and maintains an active online communication platform where volunteers coordinate locations and other details. Other local sweeping technology has evolved as well.

One year ago I introduced you to Michael Reiss, a BikeLoud volunteer who embraced the challenge and has been working on various sweeper prototypes of his own ever since. Reiss maintains a website for BikeLoud’s sweeping program that includes specifications of all the sweeping contraptions he’s built, a how-to guide for using the Bike Lane Sweeper, and a map where he marks off routes that have been swept.

With years of testing and use under their belts, BikeLoud and their amazing volunteers are confident the sweepers work. They also know there’s demand for them all over the city. All that’s missing are more volunteers and a sustainable budget to keep the wheels turning.

Tomorrow (Tuesday, November 25th), BikeLoud is hosting their first meeting, “to discuss a sweeper budget and ideas for increasing sweeping efficiency.” The goal is to inspire more folks to create sweeping devices of their own and/or to buy more bike lane sweepers.

This is an exciting niche in the bike advocacy world that’s really poised for growth. If you’re intrigued, attend tomorrow’s Sweeper Zoom, join BikeLoud’s Slack channel and/or stay tuned to BikePortland for updates.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, contact me 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 paying subscriber.

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Shawn Murphy
Shawn Murphy
2 hours ago

Considering the abysmal condition of many of our bike lanes I’d almost think the city does not take cycling quite as seriously as many of us think they do.

Tyler K.
2 hours ago

Yeah it was really great to see BikeLoudPDX out clearing Rosa Parks Way yesterday with their BikeLaneSweeper. It was a really satisfying moment. We got some great video that is also going viral which helps everyone involved.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DRagpzCE9sV/

Angus Peters
Angus Peters
2 hours ago

Promising! Quick question though: do these bike-powered sweepers also handle the gravel PBOT lovingly distributes every time it snows? Because as soon as “slippery leaf season” ends, we enter “rapid wipeout gravel season,” and PBOT’s cleanup record there… let’s just say it leaves a few pebbles to be desired….

1kWatt
1kWatt
1 hour ago

Would be hilarious if auto clubs had to band together to be sure roads had proper de-icing/drainage/pothole maintenance….but I guess as long as there’s billions to be made with all things “auto”….won’t ever be an issue

dw
dw
1 hour ago
Reply to  1kWatt

Well, if the No Gas Tax petition gets enough signatures and their ballot measure passes, we might just get to see some grassroots snow plowing in action.

The thing about clearing bike lanes is it’s hard to make things worse. Someone trying to patch potholes or plow a road by themselves can do some real damage to the pavement.