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Hi-Tech & Low-Tech Bicycle madness


Jason Battersby's "Orange Tequila Sunrise":


(image credit: Jason Battersby)

Riding this machine requires special road markings:



Yuji Fujimura's concept for an electric bicycle (which would also charge your laptop):




Hubless (and spokeless) wheels on a concept bike by Brandon Waugh:



Fantastic Skeleton Bicycle art piece by Jud Turner, complete with red LED eye sockets. Below is the t-shirt design that will go good with that


(image credit: Jud Turner)

Alessio is a somewhat strange-looking bike specially designed for Abruzzo National Park in Italy


Ever seen a design for an urban vehicle shaped like a budding tulip? Eric Stoddard from Speed Studio Design came up with this human/electric powered tricycle:



(images credit: Eric Stoddard)

Marino Drake's EV1 concept – a hi-tech electric bike with a removable engine - is a great compromise between a normal bike and motorcycle, where you have a choice if you want to pedal all the way to the office, coast there under electric power.


(images credit: Marino Drake)


Lucy in the Sky... on a bicycle -
Bizarre Bicycle Parking "Forest" and Overhead Bicycle Lanes




(images Martin Angelov)





If you have bicycle lanes in the sky, then why not make the bicycle parking trees, or the whole forest? Check out "Tree Parking", by Abhinav Dapke:




More Concepts: "I Want to Ride My Bicycle"

The Zoomla folding bike transforms into a trolley in a couple of seconds
(image credit: Eric Stoddard)

Neat two-wheel set-up for two riders - Co-Joy from Pengtao Yu;

(image credit: Pengtao Yu)

Neat "Shift-Bike" concept for beginners - the rear wheel can provide an extra stability when necessary (designed by Matt Grossman):




Speaking of ecologically-sound bikes (find bike tires and more), here is one manufactured out of bamboo - apparently the properties of bamboo frame are comparable to frame made from carbon and even titanium! BikeBamboo company makes them:




"In wood the strongest fibres are packed in the centre of the trunk, however in bamboo the strongest fibres are distributed most densely in the outer surface region. As a consequence the most stable fibre structures in bamboo are most dense in regions of greatest longitudinal stress. Wood bends relatively easily, but bamboo does not."

The idea is not new: bamboo cycles were sold in London, back in 1897:



Here is an unique wooden bicycle from Jens Eichler:




Not exactly a bicycle, but the Propulsion Powered Flying Cycle, created by the Japanese designer Norio Fujikawa, is every Akira's fan wet dream. Hope this beauty will grace the skies one day:




(images credit: Norio Fujikawa)

Some interesting tandem bike variations (including a robot which actually pedals behind the main rider):






Glorious low-tech:












We love these German and Dutch Pub Bikes, designed to share great fun and great beer with your buddies. PedalPub company in Minnesota will rent you one, so that your company can go with you, merrily, merrily down the road.... and maybe on into a ditch.



(images via 1, 2)

Never be thirsty-while-riding again.... Bottom right: same idea, but entirely DIY -





Good luck with that -


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